DALLAS, TX.- A rare Architettura Trumeau Bar-Cabinet, which has remained for more than half a century in the family of its original owner, will find a new home when it is sold Sept. 30 in
Heritage Auctions Design Auction.
A Rare Early Illuminated Architettura Trumeau Bar-Cabinet, designed 1951, produced 1950s by Piero Fornasetti and Gio Ponti (estimate: $50,000-70,000), it originally was acquired by New York- and Chicago-based fashion model Molly Goldman, who installed it in her penthouse apartment on Chicagos Lake Shore Drive. When she retired, this extraordinary piece was passed along to Chicago artist and educator Jackie Seiden, who made it a centerpiece in the colorful home she shared with her husband, Don, before recently turning it over to her son, an architect and property developer in London.
Piero Fornasetti remains a very important figure in 20th century design, creating an entire tradition of design and decoration that continues today under the leadership of his son Barnaba Fornasetti, Heritage Auctions Design Director Brent Lewis said. This is a really extraordinary example of Fornasettis early work, and it is a rare example with provenance as compelling as the piece itself.
The lot effectively serves two functions it opens up as a secretary that could be used for writing, but the ornate detail on the exterior also allows it to stand alone as a piece of sculpture. The Milanese designer collaborated on the offered lot with Gio Ponti, the Italian architect, designer and artist who built more than 100 buildings around the world.
Built in the Neoclassical style, the cabinet features trompe loeil architectural designs applied via printing throughout. The bureau that makes up the lower section is raised on tapered brass (original) legs, opening to an illuminated writing surface, which is enclosed by twin doors that open to reveal an interior shelved with glass.
The auction also features a Rare Suspension Lamp, circa 1928 by Jean-Michel Frank (estimate: $30,000-50,000), a French designer known for his minimalist style. The lamp was supplied by interior designer Frances Elkins for Mr. and Mrs. Laurance H. Armour at Two Gables, a Georgian-style mansion in tony Lake Forest, Illinois, near Chicago. The stunning home was sold in 1913 to Laurance Armour, heir to a meatpacking fortune and his wife, Frances. So taken by the lamp was Elkins that she had a similar one installed in her own office in San Franciscos Fishermans Wharf.
Other top lots in the auction include, but are not limited to:
A Charles Sumner Greene and Henry Mather Greene Group of Six Chairs for the Drawing Room of the Cordelia Culbertson House, Pasadena, California, circa 1913, executed by the Peter Hall Workshop (estimate: $50,000-70,000)
A Toots Zynsky Allontanarsi (to swerve), 2015 (estimate: $30,000-50,000)
Jon Kuhns Heaven Bound, 2000 (estimate: $20,000-36,000)
A Pair of Armchairs for the Cordelia Culbertson House, Pasadena, California, circa 1910, executed by the Peter Hall Workshop by Charles Sumner Greene and Henry Mather Greene (estimate: $30,000-50,000)
A Gentleman's Sofa for the Cordelia Culbertson House, Pasadena, California and a Lady's Sofa for the Cordelia Culbertson House, Pasadena, California, both by Charles Sumner Greene and Henry Mather Greene, circa 1913 and executed by the Peter Hall Workshop (estimates: $20,000-30,000 each)
A George Nakashima Pair of Conoid Lounge Chairs, 1990 (estimate: $15,000-25,000)
A Dale Chihuly Five-Piece Macchia Group with Seafoam Lip Wrap, 1984 (estimate: $15,000-25,000)
A Multinecked Jar-Sculpture, 1955 by Peter Voulkos (estimate: $10,000-15,000)
A Hans J. Wegner Papa Bear Chair and Ottoman, circa 1954, A.P. Stolen (estimate: $10,000-15,000)