Null MARIE ANTOINETTE BOULLARD-DEVÉ. A girl. Ink drawing on paper
Made circa 193…
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MARIE ANTOINETTE BOULLARD-DEVÉ. A girl. Ink drawing on paper Made circa 1930. 65.5x50 cm Provenance: Marie Antoinette Boullard-Devé (1890-1970), Tangier. Fold on the center. Tears on the margins. Rust and stains.

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MARIE ANTOINETTE BOULLARD-DEVÉ. A girl. Ink drawing on paper Made circa 1930. 65.5x50 cm Provenance: Marie Antoinette Boullard-Devé (1890-1970), Tangier. Fold on the center. Tears on the margins. Rust and stains.

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JOE COLOMBO (Milan, 1930-1971) for ZANOTTA. Pair of "Birillo" stools, 1970s. Chromed metal and plastic. White vinyl seat. Designer's and manufacturer's stamp on base. In good condition. Measurements: 105 x 43 x 44 cm. The Birillo stool was designed by Joe Colombo and chosen by the acclaimed film director Ridley Scott as a space-age inspired stool on the set of Blade Runner. The combination of modern materials for the time (plastic and steel derivatives) made it a completely new model. Architect and designer Cesare Colombo, nicknamed "Joe" Colombo, was an artist, architect, furniture, product and interior designer who was central to Italian design in the 1960s. Trained at the Academy of Fine Arts and Architecture of the Polytechnic University of Milan, where he devoted himself, among other things, to painting, sculpture and drawing, skills that would serve him to develop his career as a designer by setting up his own studio in 1962. Throughout the 1960s he collaborated with major publishers such as Kartell, O-Luce and Zanotta. Many of his works are still exhibited in museums around the world and the artist is the subject of regular retrospectives, studies and exhibitions. During the 1960s, the designer worked mainly on the creation of furniture that stood out for being easily modular, flexible and practical, as is the case with these chairs, which can be transported and adapted to the needs of their user. He focused on a global design, where the elements of the furniture transcend space and architecture. In this way, Colombo moves towards a form of design that helps the user to save space and time. Some of the Italian designer's most famous works are the "Elda" armchair (1963), the "Continental Library" (1965), the "Universal" (1967) and "Tube" chairs (1969) and the "Chariot Boby" (1969). His career and achievements led him to take part in the 14th Milan Triennale, exhibiting some of his interior design proposals. In 1964 he won the gold medal at the Milan Triennale with the acrylic table lamp, which is now part of the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in Philadelphia. In 1972, shortly after his death, his overall furniture project was shown in the exhibition "Italia: The New Domestic Landscape" held at MOMA in New York, realised by ELCO - FIARM, Boffi, Ideal - Standard, with the help of Sormani. In 1984, a retrospective of his work was held at the Villeneuve Museum of Modern Art. Subsequently, in 2005, the Milan Triennale hosted the retrospective Joe Colombo Inventing the Future.

[MARIE-THERESE, infanta of Spain and dauphine of France ]. Coffre de voyage aux armes. Sl, sd (c. 1745). Superb historical object bearing the coat of arms of the dauphine Marie-Thérèse-Antoinette of Spain, first wife of Louis de France, eldest son of Louis XV. Red morocco traveling case with coat of arms. H 23 x L 57.5 x W 29.7 cm. An exceptional piece for its rarity, quality and princely origin, this chest was made in France by the leatherworker L . Lecoq, whose telltale mark is stamped on the back (rooster emblem surrounded by his number L L) with a gilded iron on the morocco. The Lecoqs were a family and a true dynasty of leatherworkers with handed-down expertise, who were loyal suppliers to the Versailles court throughout the 18th century. Marie-Thérèse Antoinette Raphaëlle de Bourbon, Infanta of Spain and Dauphine of France, born in Madrid in 1726 and died in Versailles in 1746, was a Spanish princess, daughter of Philip V and Elisabeth Farnese, who was married to the Dauphin Louis de France, eldest child of Louis XV and future father of Louis XVI (he never reigned) in 1745, in order to reconcile France and Spain (in parallel with the marriage of Madame Première to the Infante Philippe). This type of travel furniture is a rare reminder of the train that every French princess followed on her travels. These small trunks could have been used to store accessories, crockery, miscellaneous books and so on. (OHR, 2525). The trunk is in very good condition. Minor wear marks on the morocco, discreet soiling (blackened dust on the trimmings or underside) and minor restorations (underside and opening cords fitted later, probably in place of brackets often of the same metal as the exterior trimmings on this type of object). Slightly obscured or oxidized gilding on all pushed irons.