Sandrik-T Mocca Coffee Grinder
Czecoslovakia, ca 1970 
Height: 33 cm.
Description

Sandrik-T Mocca Coffee Grinder Czecoslovakia, ca 1970 Height: 33 cm.

432 

Sandrik-T Mocca Coffee Grinder

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PIERRE LOTTIER (France, 1916 - Santa Susana, Spain, 1987). Coffee table, ca. 1960. Walnut wood, with hand painted top. It shows signs of use and wear. Measurements: 42 x 92 x 92 cm. Coffee table designed by Pierre Lottier in the sixties. In typology and decoration it shows a singular aesthetic, as it was common in Lottier's historicist pieces. A circular crossbar supports the thin turned legs on which sits the circular top, decorated with a composition of grooved lines forming a spiral in the center of which has been represented a figure of prehistoric inspiration. Pierre Lottier was a prominent furniture designer and decorator born in France but based in Barcelona, active from the post-war period. Already in the sixties and seventies he had an important workshop, where important cabinetmakers of the new generation were trained. Lottier was mainly dedicated to the decoration of important houses in the Catalan capital, although he also designed others outside the city, such as Ava Gardner's house in Madrid. Born into a family of artists (his father was the famous restaurateur and namesake Pierre Lottier who founded in 1880 "La Reserve" on the Côte d'Azur, one of the high society establishments most valued by millionaires and aristocrats), Pierre Lottier settled in Madrid in the 1930s, set apart by French society. He came into contact with the Spanish elite of the time as a procurer of important works of art, especially porcelain and oriental bronzes. In the 1950s he settled between Madrid and Barcelona. He collaborated with important design houses such as Casa Valentí or Casa Gancedo for the most historical fabrics. Pierre Lottier began emulating the career of Marc du Plantier and the famous Maison Jansen in Paris. His beginnings were based on the purity of the French "Grand Gout", centered mainly on Louis XV and XVI styles. Later, in the 1950's, it drifted to the English styles typical of the late 18th century: Hepplewhite, Adam, Chippendale, Sheraton or Gillwood were the surnames with which Lottier was most inspired. By 1970 the style drifted into a more modern wake. His new designs were based on Art Deco and classical rationalism, typical of a new, more intellectual society.