Null JAVIER BALLESTER MONTESOL (1952). "POLO CLUB" and "URBAN LANDSCAPE".
Techni…
Description

JAVIER BALLESTER MONTESOL (1952). "POLO CLUB" and "URBAN LANDSCAPE". Technique mixte sur papier. Signé et daté 1996. 32,5 x 50 cm et 35 x 50,5 cm (non encadrées).

855 

JAVIER BALLESTER MONTESOL (1952). "POLO CLUB" and "URBAN LANDSCAPE". Technique mixte sur papier. Signé et daté 1996. 32,5 x 50 cm et 35 x 50,5 cm (non encadrées).

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JOAN ANTONI BLANC (Tortosa, 1940) for Tramo. Table lamp "Seta/Tulip", 1968. Double plastic lampshade in yellow and white inside that produces a spectacular light. Very good overall condition with some signs of age. Selection adi fad. Measurements: 56 cm (height) x 36 cm (lampshade diameter). The lamp "Seta/Tulip" is distinguished by its semi-oval lampshade that resembles the cap of a mushroom, as well as by the circular foot that rises slightly in its central area to join with the cylindrical shaft. It was published by Tramo (Trabajos molestos), a company founded by the iconic Catalan designer Miguel Milá. Joan Antoni Blanc was one of the founders of the Eina school and one of the main advocates of the need to incorporate technological knowledge and to orient design in industrial applications. He specialized in the field of design, specializing in furniture and lighting applied to the domestic, urban and office environment, although he has also developed several designs related to nautical, motoring and motorcycling. In 1972 he created "Estudi de Disseny Blanc", incorporating as assistant Pau Joan Vidal, an industrial designer trained at the Massana and Elisava schools, who later became his partner. He was also president of the Association of Professional Designers between 1986 and 1989 and participated in the creation of BCD. Among the products developed by Blanc, the "Cónica" lamp (Delta de Oro ADI-FAD in 1965), the "Cubiform" system of cabinets and drawers, the "semi-spherical" lamp (Delta de Oro ADI-FAD in 1966), the "Torre de Babel" set of expandable elements, the "globe" lamp (Delta de Oro ADI-FAD in 1966), and the "Torre de Babel" set of expandable elements (Delta de Oro ADI-FAD in 1966), the "Globe" lamp (Delta de plata ADI-FAD in 1968), the "Perfils" shelving and container system, the "Sinclina" lamp (Delta de plata ADI-FAD and prize for the best Spanish design at the Madrid fair in 1991), the "Prima 1000" shelving system and the "Escala" lamp. The Barcelona Design Museum is the repository of part of its documentary collections and three pieces designed by Joan Antoni Blanc: the "Cubiform" cabinet and the "Escala" and "Sinclina" floor lamps. The "Seta/Tulip" lamp is distinguished by its semi-oval lampshade that resembles the cap of a mushroom, as well as by the circular foot that rises slightly in its central area to join the cylindrical shaft. It was published by Tramo (Trabajos molestos), a company founded by the iconic Catalan designer Miguel Milá. Joan Antoni Blanc was one of the founders of the Eina school and one of the main advocates of the need to incorporate technological knowledge and to orient design in industrial applications. He specialized in the field of design, specializing in furniture and lighting applied to the domestic, urban and office environment, although he has also developed several designs related to nautical, motoring and motorcycling. In 1972 he created "Estudi de Disseny Blanc", incorporating as assistant Pau Joan Vidal, an industrial designer trained at the Massana and Elisava schools, who later became his partner. He was also president of the Association of Professional Designers between 1986 and 1989 and participated in the creation of BCD. Among the products developed by Blanc, the "Cónica" lamp (Delta de Oro ADI-FAD in 1965), the "Cubiform" system of cabinets and drawers, the "semi-spherical" lamp (Delta de Oro ADI-FAD in 1966), the "Torre de Babel" set of expandable elements, the "globe" lamp (Delta de Oro ADI-FAD in 1966), and the "Torre de Babel" set of expandable elements (Delta de Oro ADI-FAD in 1966), the "Globe" lamp (Delta de plata ADI-FAD in 1968), the "Perfils" shelving and container system, the "Sinclina" lamp (Delta de plata ADI-FAD and prize for the best Spanish design at the Madrid fair in 1991), the "Prima 1000" shelving system and the "Escala" lamp. The Barcelona Design Museum is the repository of part of its documentary collections and three pieces designed by Joan Antoni Blanc: the "Cubiform" cabinet and the "Escala" and "Sinclina" floor lamps.

JAVIER MARISCAL (Almazora, Castellón, 1950) for Akaba. Garriris" chair, 1987. Chrome-plated square steel tube frame with aluminum, plywood seat and red leather upholstery. In very good condition. This model is in important collections and museums such as the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, and the Museu del Disseny in Barcelona. It was exhibited at the George Pompidou in Paris for the Nouvelles Tendances exhibition in 1987. Measurements: 97 x 44 x 60 cm. The Garriris chair assimilates the animated character Mickey Mouse with the iconic ears on the backrest and his characteristic shoes. Renowned industrial designer, cartoonist and comic artist, Javier Mariscal has lived and worked in Barcelona since 1970. He studied design at the Elisava School in Barcelona, but soon abandoned his studies to learn directly from his surroundings and follow his own creative impulses. He began his career in the world of underground comics in publications such as "El Rrollo Enmascarado" or "Star", along with Farry, Nazario and Pepichek. After making his first own comics in the mid-seventies, in 1979 he designed the Bar Cel Ona logo, a work for which he began to be known by the general public. The following year the Dúplex opened in Valencia, the first bar signed by Mariscal, together with Fernando Salas, for which he designed one of his most famous pieces, the Dúplex stool, a true icon of design in the eighties both inside and outside our borders. In 1981 his work as a furniture designer led him to participate in the exhibition of the Memphis Group in Milan. In 1987 he exhibited at the Georges Pompidou Center in Paris and participated in the Documenta in Kassel. Two years later his design Cobi is chosen as the mascot for the 1992 Barcelona Olympic Games, controversial at first but now recognized as the most profitable mascot in the history of the modern Games. In 1989 he created Estudio Mariscal and collaborated on various projects with designers and architects such as Arata Isozaki, Alfredo Arribas, Fernando Salas, Fernando Amat and Pepe Cortés. Among his most outstanding works are the visual identities for the Swedish Socialist Party, the Onda Cero radio station, the Barcelona Zoo, the University of Valencia, the Lighthouse design and architecture center in Glasgow, the GranShip cultural center in Japan, and the London post-production company Framestore. In 1999 he received the National Design Prize, awarded by the Spanish Ministry of Industry and the BCD Foundation in recognition of his entire professional career.

HARRY BERTOIA (Italy, 1915 - USA, 1978). Set of four "Side Bertoia" chairs, ca. 1960. Steel rods. Measurements: 74 x 46 x 56 cm. Drawing on his experience as head of the Experimental Department at the Eames Studio, Harry Bertoia designed the Side chair for Knoll International in 1952. A single piece of steel rod forms the seat and back, joined to a lightweight steel frame that forms the base. The visible structure of the Side model suggests that the chairs were objects in space, and as Bertoia said, "space passes through them". A painter, graphic artist, sculptor, university professor and furniture designer, Harry Bertoia emigrated to the United States at the age of fifteen, and it was there that he developed his training and career. He studied at the Detroit Society of Arts and Crafts and later at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield, Michigan, where he later became a teacher and created the department of metalwork. During these years he began to experiment with the forms of jewelry, and to explore ideas that would later emerge in his sculpture and designs. In 1943 he began his collaboration with designer Charles Eames, with whom he worked until 1946. After a period working for Point Loma Navel Electronics as a creator of equipment manuals, in 1949 he joined Hans Knoll at Knoll Associates. His first sculpture exhibition took place at the Knoll Showroom in New York in 1951, and the following year Knoll would patent his most famous furniture design, the welded rod "Diamond" chair. Bertoia's designs are now in the collections of major design and contemporary art museums, including MoMA in New York and many others.