Flickr Widget

Showing posts with label Maria Pergay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maria Pergay. Show all posts

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Sold at auction: Paul Evans coffee table

Following on the heels of yesterday's Paul Evans post, you might recall my post about another Paul Evans coffee table we had in the store not too long ago. We sent it to the Wright Design auction, which was held December 12. It was our first time to send a piece to that house, and we were pleased with the result. To see all the beautiful pieces that kept our little table company on the auction floor, including the gorgeous and very rare Isamu Noguchi Cloud ottoman that sold for $170,500 and the Maria Pergay banquette that sold for $158,500, visit the Wright site. You'll be in for a treat.


Isamu Noguchi Cloud ottoman, 1948
Lot 120
wright20.com

Maria Pergay banquette, 1968
Lot 256
wright20.com

Paul Evans coffee table, 1967
Lot 311
wright20.com

Friday, May 17, 2013

Maria Pergay

Maria Pergay (1930- ) immigrated to Paris from Russia when she was seven years old, just before World War II began, and eventually became a well-known designer of furniture and interiors. Interestingly, demand for her work has had a resurgence in this century, as interest in items produced in the 1960s and 1970s continues to grow.

Pergay started her career as a window dresser in Paris and gained recognition in the 1950s and early 1960s for creating modern objects in silver for customers such as Hermès and Christian Dior. She is best known for her collection of stainless steel furniture that she presented in Paris in 1968. The line was originally produced French manufacturer by Ugine-Gueugnon and was considered to defy the hard-edged, industrial image of steel.

Her work was never mass-produced. In fact, each piece was a limited edition, and only 40 or fewer were made. She had a loyal following among wealthy collectors such as fashion designer Pierre Cardin. He purchased her entire first collection and commissioned later work.

In 2006 her work was exhibited in New York at the Demisch Demant and Lehmann Maupin galleries. For those exhibits, she created a new collection of 17 limited edition pieces in stainless steel, bronze, wood and mother-of-pearl. The demand for her work was so great that Richard Wright sold a pair of her chairs at auction for $79,200, more than 10 times their estimated value.

In 1970, Pergay designed and built a modern 6,000 square foot home of hand-laid stone, white rubber floors and glass walls with her then-partner and collaborator, architect Pierre Baratçabal. She later married Marc Pergay and raised four children with him till their divorce.

In 2010, at age 79, she showed a new collection at the Demisch Demant gallery, at which time she said that since she started everything in 1957, her relationship with steel has been her best marriage.

From nytimes.com


Pergay home in St. Pierre de Vassols, France
with her Ring chairs and oversized lamps
nytimes.com

Pergay living room, alternate view
nytimes.com

Use of hand-laid stone and glass in Pergay home
nytimes.com

Vague stool
metmuseum.org
Metal and wood tables
artnet.com

Table
lehmannmaupin.com

Side chair
chairblog.eu

Screen
artnet.com

Plateaux table
architecturaldigest.com

Banquette
chairblog.eu

Table
interiordesign.net

Flying Carpet daybed
homerejuvenation.com.sg

Hanging lamp
modulolab.com