ClassiCon Petite Coiffeuse
  • ClassiCon Petite Coiffeuse
  • ClassiCon Petite Coiffeuse
  • ClassiCon Petite Coiffeuse
  • ClassiCon Petite Coiffeuse
  • ClassiCon Petite Coiffeuse
  • ClassiCon Petite Coiffeuse
  • ClassiCon Petite Coiffeuse
  • ClassiCon Petite Coiffeuse

ClassiCon Petite Coiffeuse

€7,482.00
Contact us for Shipping Costs
Contact us for Shipping Costs

Eileen Gray understood how to combine the aesthetic with the practical as did few designers. The geometrically structured small dressing table, designed for her summerhouse E1027, is a proof of this. The drawers in the small side box of the Petite Coiffeuse swivel out.

Everything is reduced to the essentials, but it is all within easy reach. Dressing table consisting of tabletop and suspended box with two swivel-out drawers and one door.

Frame of chromium-plated steel tubing. Tabletop and box of MDF high-gloss lacquer finish. Please contact us for details and colours. Authorised by The World Licence Holder Aram Designs Ltd, London

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Specifications

Chest of drawers and dressing table consisting of tabletop and suspended box with two swivel drawers and one door. Frame chromeplated tubular steel. Tabletop and box of MDF high-gloss lacquered in black or white. Plastic gliders in black.

Materials
chrome steel tube, MDF 

 

Size Description

Width: 40cm
Height: 84cm
Depth: 64cm

  • Eilleen Gray

    Eilee Gray was born in Enniscorthy, Ireland, she spent her childhood in London and was among the first women to be admitted to the Slade School of Art where she took up painting in 1898 before undergoing an apprenticeship in a lacquer workshop. She moved to Paris in 1902 where she quickly established herself as one of the leading designers of lacquered screens and decorative panels.<p>During the ‘20s and ‘30s she became one of the leading exponents of the revolutionary new theories of design and construction and worked closely with many of the outstanding figures of the modern movement, including Le Corbusier and JJP Oud. Well to the fore of this group she exhibited chrome, steel tube and glass furniture in 1925 - the same year as Mies van der Rohe and Marcel Breuer and well before Le Corbusier. Her next major contribution to design was in architecture. Encouraged by Le Corbusier and JJP Oud, she designed two houses in the Alpes Maritimes, one at Roquebrune (built 1927-29), the other at Castellar (built 1932-34).</p><p>After the war and up to her death, she continued to work as a designer, on both major projects like the cultural and social centre which occupied her from 1946-47, and on a number of smaller furniture designs. In 1972 she was appointed a Royal Designer to Industry by the Royal Society of Art, London. In 1973 Eileen Gray signed a Worldwide contract with Aram Designs, London, to bring her designs into production for the first time. The Museum of Modern Art added her legendary Adjustable Table E 1027 to its permanent design collection in 1978.</p><p>Eileen Gray Kollektion: Authorised by The World Licence Holder Aram Designs Ltd, London.</p>
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