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Description

Design lamp Aldo Tura Italy, 1950s, designed by Aldo Tura for Macabo, stamped on the base, carved wood, lacquered, bearded goblin in long frock with lantern and stick, the latter broken in the centre, otherwise in good condition, single-lamp electrified, h 60 cm.

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Design lamp Aldo Tura Italy, 1950s, designed by Aldo Tura for Macabo, stamped on the base, carved wood, lacquered, bearded goblin in long frock with lantern and stick, the latter broken in the centre, otherwise in good condition, single-lamp electrified, h 60 cm.

Estimate 200 - 300 EUR
Starting price 200 EUR

* Not including buyer’s premium.
Please read the conditions of sale for more information.

Sale fees: 32.13 %
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For sale on Friday 30 Aug : 10:00 (CEST)
plauen, Germany
Auktionshaus Mehlis GmbH
+493741221005
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ALDO TURA (Italy, 1909-1963). Bar cabinet, ca. 1960. Lacquered wood, rosewood and brass. Includes key. Measurements: 154 x 80 x 40 cm. This highly personal piece of bar furniture shows the confluence of interests that motivated Aldo Tura's creations and gave them a singular stamp, such as experimentation with different materials or unorthodox surface treatments: see here the attractive patina achieved with the brownish lacquering of the two semicircular doors, outlined with studs and attached to the furniture with attractive hardware. Aldo Tura absorbed the precepts of Art Deco, but he went beyond its minimalist legacy in search of a more dynamic style, with historicist echoes. The rectangular-bodied sea cabinet, which houses a glazed interior, sits on a turned base with a globular belly. The doors open with brass handles in the form of turnstones. Aldo Tura began his career in experimental furniture design in the 1930s. After the sharp, angular forms of Art Deco, wood began to be used in free forms, full of curves, and Tura saw in this new taste a new direction for furniture design. His work is a significant combination of free and uninhibited forms, sometimes exceptionally ironic. His designs are also examples of the highest craftsmanship, often being produced in limited edition series, and even just a prototype. In the 1950s, Tura discovered the evocative charm of furniture painted with Venetian architectural views, and also began to experiment with various materials, such as eggshell, parchment, goatskin or wood veneers.