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14 December 2024
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Jacqueline Lecoq and Antoine Philippon
Cabinet, 1307 Series, Edition Erwin Behr
, ca. 1962
62 x 47.25 x 21 in. (157.5 x 120 x 53.3 cm.)
close
Jacqueline Lecoq and Antoine Philippon
Cabinet, 1307 Series, Edition Erwin Behr
, ca. 1962
62 x 47.25 x 21 in. (157.5 x 120 x 53.3 cm.)
close
Jacqueline Lecoq and Antoine Philippon
Cabinet, 1307 Series, Edition Erwin Behr
, ca. 1962
62 x 47.25 x 21 in. (157.5 x 120 x 53.3 cm.)
close
Jacqueline Lecoq and Antoine Philippon
Cabinet, 1307 Series, Edition Erwin Behr
, ca. 1962
62 x 47.25 x 21 in. (157.5 x 120 x 53.3 cm.)
close
Jacqueline Lecoq and Antoine Philippon
Cabinet, 1307 Series, Edition Erwin Behr
, ca. 1962
62 x 47.25 x 21 in. (157.5 x 120 x 53.3 cm.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
Zoom
Jacqueline Lecoq and Antoine Philippon
French
Cabinet, 1307 Series, Edition Erwin Behr
,
ca. 1962
Jacqueline Lecoq and Antoine Philippon
Cabinet, 1307 Series, Edition Erwin Behr
, ca. 1962
62 x 47.25 x 21 in. (157.5 x 120 x 53.3 cm.)
close
Jacqueline Lecoq and Antoine Philippon
Cabinet, 1307 Series, Edition Erwin Behr
, ca. 1962
62 x 47.25 x 21 in. (157.5 x 120 x 53.3 cm.)
close
Jacqueline Lecoq and Antoine Philippon
Cabinet, 1307 Series, Edition Erwin Behr
, ca. 1962
62 x 47.25 x 21 in. (157.5 x 120 x 53.3 cm.)
close
Jacqueline Lecoq and Antoine Philippon
Cabinet, 1307 Series, Edition Erwin Behr
, ca. 1962
62 x 47.25 x 21 in. (157.5 x 120 x 53.3 cm.)
close
Jacqueline Lecoq and Antoine Philippon
Cabinet, 1307 Series, Edition Erwin Behr
, ca. 1962
62 x 47.25 x 21 in. (157.5 x 120 x 53.3 cm.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
Zoom
Medium
Design, Cabinets , Mahogany, Pressed Plywood, Chrome-Plated Steel
Size
62 x 47.25 x 21 in. (157.5 x 120 x 53.3 cm.)
Markings
Retains "Behr" stamp on the interior of the cabinet.
Price
Price on Request
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Peter Blake Gallery
Laguna Beach
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About this Artwork
Movement
Mid-Century Modernism
Exhibitions
06/26/2022–12/01/2022 GESAMTKUNSTWERK
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Description
This cabinet was designed in 1962 by Antoine Philippon and Jacqueline Lecoq on the occasion of Behr’s 50th anniversary.
With prominent roles at the Société des artistes décorateurs (SAD), Antoine Philippon (1930–1995) and Jacqueline Lecoq (b. 1932) are among the most influential figures of twentieth-century French design.
The award-winning design and architecture duo met in 1954 and opened their independent studio the following year. Together, they established a prolific career participating annually in Salon des Art Ménagers and Salon des Artistes Décorateurs, while also taking local and international commissions, such as the “Pointe de Diamant” Sideboard and 1307 Series Cabinet commissioned by the German industrialist Erwin Behr upon his firm’s fiftieth anniversary in 1962.
Following the generation of SAD dissidents that made up the Union des artistes modernes during the ‘30s and ‘40s, Philippon and Lecoq pioneered a functionalist design that embraced industrial materials like plywood, glass and steel and shunned ornamentation—all-the-while maintaining an undeniable commitment to artistic craftsmanship. Rather than making an outright denunciation of decoration, their experimental designs embraced luxury and sophistication by capitalizing on the elegance of the materials themselves. In doing so, they sidestepped the need for decoration altogether and were able to produce functional pieces true to the ethos of Modernity.
Their seamless mixture of organic and inorganic materials sets up mesmerizing juxtapositions of contrasting surfaces. In their “Pointe de Diamant” series, textured, sensuous mahogany is coupled with pressed plywood doors coated in ultra-cool white lacquer. Philippon and Lecoq’s acuity to geometry adds yet another dimension of spectacular dynamics. Rectilinear faces are divided into quadrants of converging triangles that gently sink inward. These sinking pyramids simultaneously complement and contradict the austerity of the functionalist designs. The structural poetry of these designs is further emphasized as the pieces seem to float elegantly on their chrome-plated steel legs.
Philippon and Lecoq put this gravity-defying strategy on full display for the stunning glass and rosewood Desk (1960). Any severity expected of such strictly rectilinear works is offset by their full embrace of the materials in their sensitive and meticulous design.
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