JEAN DUNAND (1877-1942)
JEAN DUNAND (1877-1942)
JEAN DUNAND (1877-1942)
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JEAN DUNAND (1877-1942)
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Property from the Distinguished Collection of Ms. Eva Chow
JEAN DUNAND (1877-1942)

Pair of Folding Games Tables for Templeton Crocker, San Francisco, circa 1927-1928

Details
JEAN DUNAND (1877-1942)
Pair of Folding Games Tables for Templeton Crocker, San Francisco, circa 1927-1928
lacquered wood, felt
27 ½ x 31 1⁄8 x 31 1⁄8 in. (69.8 x 79 x 79 cm) (each)
each stamped JEAN DUNAND LAQUEUR
Provenance
Charles Templeton Crocker, San Francisco, commissioned directly from the artist, circa 1927-1928
Sotheby's, London, 19 October 2000, lot 118
Acquired from the above by the present owner

Charles Templeton Crocker, San Francisco, commissioned directly from the artist, circa 1927-1928
DeLorenzo Gallery, New York
Christie's, New York, 20 June 2002, lot 76
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
Jean Dunand, exh. cat., DeLorenzo Gallery, New York, 1985, p. 54 (for a related example)
F. Marcilhac, Jean Dunand, His Life and Work, London, 1991, pp. 113 (for a discussion of the commission) 319, no. 1120 (for a related example)
F. and A. Marcilhac, Jean Dunand, Paris, 2020, pp. 117 (for a discussion of the commission), 294, no. 89 (for a related example)
Further details
Other furnishings from the Templeton Crocker penthouse designed by Jean Dunand can be found in the permanent collection of the The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

In Situ images: Photography by Flying Studio

Brought to you by

Alexander Heminway
Alexander Heminway International Head of Design

Lot Essay

An Eye to the West

Although the main patrons of Art Deco were based in France, one of the period’s most ambitious and complete residential interiors was created in the United States: the San Francisco penthouse of Charles Templeton Crocker, the millionaire grandson of the founder of the Union Pacific Railroad. Crocker had bought the Russian Hill property in 1927 and traveled to Paris where he met decorator Jean-Michel Frank whom he commissioned to decorate the apartment.

At a time when the city remained steeped in Victoriana, the apartment made a radical statement. Vogue declared it in 1929 “the first large and luxurious apartment done completely in the modern manner in the United States,” and “perhaps one of the most beautiful apartments in the world.” The living room featured parchment-clad walls and ceilings, mica-inlaid fireplace surrounds, ivory Morocco leather seating, and tables in shagreen, straw, and parchment, softly illuminated by rose quartz and obsidian lamps.

The penthouse was also a collaborative masterpiece with the dining room, breakfast room, and master bedroom designed by Jean Dunand, whose work contrasted boldly with Frank’s restraint. Trained as a sculptor and master of dinanderie and lacquer, Dunand was celebrated for his dramatic use of color and for his signature eggshell lacquer inlaid with coquille d’œuf (eggshell). At Crocker’s, Jean Dunand created a vibrant dining room with red-brown lacquer furniture inlaid with crushed eggshell and walls of sweeping gold and silver rays. The adjacent breakfast room, conceived as an underwater fantasy, featured etched tropical fish on black onyx lacquer, pink and silver furnishings, and chrome-tubed chairs. The bedroom combined black and grey lacquer furniture with silver-toned woodland scenes in laque arraché, including inlaid animal figures.

The present pair of games tables were originally placed in the bedroom, their “sponged” surface exemplifying Dunand’s preferred lacque arraché technique, in which a final lacquer layer is applied over a roughened undercoat: here, metallic gray over black, and then polished so that the raised points of the lower layer emerge, producing a smooth yet subtly mottled effect. The ensemble was dismantled and dispersed in 1959.

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