École Estienne (Paris) – 120 years of design training

École Estienne
Ecole Estienne

L’école Estienne is the traditional name of the École supérieure des arts et industries graphiques (ESAIG) (Graduate School of Arts and Printing Industry). The property is located in the 13th Paris district of Boulevard Auguste-Blanqui, at 18, not far from the Butte-aux-Cailles.

History

In 1887, anthropologist and linguist Abel Hovelacque proposed that the City of Paris should set up a municipal arts and professional printing school for the industry. In November 1889, 108 students opened their school in temporary premises on Rue Vauquelin.

In honour of the Estienne family, the school was named after a famous family of printers from the 16th century, including Henri Estienne (elder), Robert Estienne and Charles Estienne. Its mission was to address the poor printing and book-making qualifications and standards, covering theoretical and practical aspects.

Architect Menjot Dammartin designed the main building, and it was built in 1896. The machine shop (1200 m2) was made by the workshops of Gustave Eiffel in Levallois-Perret. The premises were opened by the President of France, Félix Faure, in July 1896. It is located at 18 Boulevard Auguste-Blanqui in Paris’s 13th arrondissement, not far from the Butte-aux-Cailles.

Departments

Departments and qualifications offered;

Sources

Accueil. École Estienne. http://www.ecole-estienne.paris/.

Wikipedia contributors. (2020, December 9). École Estienne. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 04:45, January 14, 2021, from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=%C3%89cole_Estienne&oldid=993171645

More on French Design

  • Ernest Chaplet (1835 – 1909) French ceramicist and studio potter

    Ernest Chaplet (1835 – 1909) French ceramicist and studio potter

    Ernest Chaplet (1835 – 1909) was a French ceramicist, an early studio potter’ who mastered slip decoration, rediscovered stoneware, and conducted copper-red studies. From 1882 to 1885, he was the director of Charles Haviland’s workshop to study decorative processes, where he collaborated with artists such as Paul Gauguin. He eventually moved to Choisy-le-Roi, where he…

  • French Art Deco Fashions: In Pochoir Prints from the 1920s (Schiffer Design Books)

    French Art Deco Fashions: In Pochoir Prints from the 1920s (Schiffer Design Books)

    French pochoir prints from Art Deco era showcase women’s fashion designs, influenced by famous designers like Charles Worth and Jean Patou, showcasing their artistry and creativity.Read More →

  • Frechet Brothers French decorators and furniture designers

    Frechet Brothers French decorators and furniture designers

    Andre Frechet (1875-1973) and Paul Frechet were French decorators and furniture designers. They were born in Chalons-sur-Mame; and active in Paris. Working together and individually from 1906, the Frechet brothers’ furniture designs were produced by various firms including Jacquemin freres in Strasbourg, E. Verot, and Charles Jean-selme; 1909-11.Read More →

  • Charles Plumet (1861 – 1928) French Architect Designer

    Charles Plumet (1861 – 1928) French Architect Designer

    In the year 1861, Charles Plumet was born. As an architect, he built structures in the mediaeval and early French Renaissance styles. He worked on interiors and furniture designs in Art Nouveau styles with Tony Selmersheim (1871–1971). Between 1896 and 1901, Charles Plumet joined l’Art dans Tout (Art in Everything), an association of architects, painters,…

  • Louis Midavaine (1888 – 1978) French Furniture Designer

    Louis Midavaine (1888 – 1978) French Furniture Designer

    Louis Midavaine (1888 – 1978) was a French accessories and furniture designer. He was born in Roubaix. He studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Roubaix.Read More →

  • Chaumet French Retail Jeweller since 1780

    Chaumet French Retail Jeweller since 1780

    Chaumet, a French retail jeweller in Paris, offers unique and exquisite designs for men and women. With a wide range of jewelry, including necklaces, bracelets, earrings, and rings, Chaumet focuses on precision and care, using only the finest materials. The store also offers customization services and luxury watches from prestigious brands. The family-owned business continues…

  • Georges Champion (1889 – 1940) French Furniture Designer

    Georges Champion (1889 – 1940) French Furniture Designer

    Georges Champion, a French decorator and furniture designer, was known for his sleek lines and modern aesthetic. Influenced by the Art Deco movement, Champion’s furniture featured geometric shapes and bold colors. He worked on high-profile projects, including Parisian hotels and restaurants. Champion’s designs are highly sought after by collectors and design enthusiasts worldwide.Read More →

  • Léon Ledru (1855 -1926) French glassmaker

    Léon Ledru (1855 -1926) French glassmaker

    Léon Ledru (1855-1926) was a French glassmaker and designer. He was the manager of the design department of the Cristalleries du Val-Saint-Lambert in Belgium for 38 years. Through the work the firm showed at the 1897 Brussels ‘Exposition Internationale,’ he stimulated interest in avant-garde design.Read More →

  • Étienne Kohlmann (1903 – 1988) French interior designer

    Étienne Kohlmann (1903 – 1988) French interior designer

    Étienne Kohlmann (1903 – 1988) was a French interior designer and decorator. He was born and raised in Paris, where he also worked professionally.Read More →

  • Claude Montana (b.1949) French Fashion Designer

    Claude Montana (b.1949) French Fashion Designer

    Montana’s career in fashion began almost accidentally; he moved to London in the early 1970s “to escape studying,” having no plans and no work visa. Raising money by selling rhinestone-studded papier mache jewellery, he met a Vogue editor by happenstance and had his work featured in the magazine. Read More →

  • Paris: May 1968 Posters of the Student Revolt

    Paris: May 1968 Posters of the Student Revolt

    In the turbulent days of May 1968 in Paris, a group of artists calling themselves the Atelier Populaire created posters that were vital in spreading the call to unite student and workers.  The propaganda of the French revolt was fed by immediate pressures.  The day by day events – the disruption of classes at Nanterre…

  • Jules-Emile Leleu (1883 – 1961) French sculptor and designer

    Jules-Emile Leleu (1883 – 1961) French sculptor and designer

    Jules-Emile Leleu was a French sculptor and designer. He was born in Boulognc-sur-Mer. He studied at the Académie des Beaux-Arts, Boulogne-sur-Mer,under Théophile Deman; private academy, Brussels. The Ecole Jean Goujon, Paris, under Secame and Ecole des Arts Appliques, Paris. Read More →

  • Le National Moblier, the institution for the French Decorative Arts

    Le National Moblier, the institution for the French Decorative Arts

    The Mobilier National is an institution attached to the Ministry of Culture that maintains, creates and distributes a unique collection of over 130,000 pieces of furniture and textiles. Its mission is to ensure the conservation and restoration of its collections, perpetuate and transmit exceptional know-how, and promote French decorative arts.Read More →

  • Martin Szekely (b.1956) French furniture designer

    Martin Szekely (b.1956) French furniture designer

    He started his career as a copper-plate engraver. In 1977— 1978, he designed furniture, notably the Ar stool, and VIA sponsored many of his early works. His first major triumph was a 25-piece furniture collection for the Sauvagnat firm, which he displayed at the 1979 Salon du Meuble in Paris. Read More →

  • Tony Selmersheim (1871 – 1971) French architect and decorator

    Tony Selmersheim (1871 – 1971) French architect and decorator

    Initially, he collaborated with architect Charles Plumet. Tony and Pierre Selmersheim worked together on furniture, furnishings, lighting, and the interior design of various structures.Read More →

  • Edmond Lachenal (1855 – 1948), French Sculptor and Ceramicist

    Edmond Lachenal (1855 – 1948), French Sculptor and Ceramicist

    Lachenal joined Théodore Deck’s studio in 1870 and later became director. He established his studio in Malakoff, near Paris, in 1880 and Chatillon-sous-Bagneux, France, in 1887. He decorated his pottery with stylized figures, landscapes, greenery, and flowers in the ‘Persian style’ influenced by Deck. Read More →

  • Abdi Abdelkader (b.1955) Algerian Designer and Teacher

    Abdi Abdelkader (b.1955) Algerian Designer and Teacher

    Abdi Abdelkader is an Algerian designer who studied at the École Nationale des Beaux-Arts and the École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs. He collaborated with Alessandro Mendini, established his design studio, designed furniture collections, and taught at the École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs.Read More →

  • Clément Mère (1861 – 1940) French designer and furniture maker

    Clément Mère (1861 – 1940) French designer and furniture maker

    Clément Mère was born in Bayonne and active in Paris. He was a French painter, table-builder, artist and furniture builder. He studied painting with Jean-Léon Gérôme at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris.Read More →

  • Raymond Subes (1893 – 1970), French metalsmith

    Raymond Subes (1893 – 1970), French metalsmith

    Raymond Subes (1893–1970) was a French metalsmith. He made ironwork for the oceanliners 1931 Atlantique, 1926 Ile-de-France, Pasteur, and 1935 Normandie. After World War II, he worked as a metalworker and became the head of Borderel et Robert.Read More →

  • The Little Book of Burberry – The Story of the Iconic Fashion House

    The Little Book of Burberry – The Story of the Iconic Fashion House

    Burberry is renowned for its coveted designs, which balance tradition and innovation. This book reveals the story behind the brand and includes photographs from its humble beginnings in 1856 to current designs. Read More →

  • Max Ingrand (1908 – 1969) French artist and decorator

    Max Ingrand (1908 – 1969) French artist and decorator

    Maurice Max-Ingrand (1908–1969) was a French artist and stained glass artist. He was captured by the Nazis during World War II but returned to France in 1945. In 1968, he established Verre Lumière, one of the first businesses to manufacture halogen lamps.Read More →

  • Pascal Mourgue (1943 – 2014) French designer and artist

    Pascal Mourgue (1943 – 2014) French designer and artist

    Pascal Mourgue is a French designer and artist. He was professionally active in Paris and the brother of Olivier Mourgue. He considers himself more of an artist than a designer. He is noted for modern yet timeless style. He designs products for both home and the office illustrate his belief that utility and fine art…

  • Jean Fouquet (1899 – 1964), French Jewellery Designer

    Jean Fouquet (1899 – 1964), French Jewellery Designer

    In 1919, he joined as a designer in the family firm, 6 rue Royale, Paris; he was a friend of Louis Aragon and Paul Eluard. Between 1920—25, he collaborated on Le Corbusier’s and Amédée Ozenfant’s review L’Esprit Nouveau: Revue International d’Esthétique. In his jewellery, he developed a liking for abstract compositions. From 1931, his jewellery…

  • George Barbier one of the Great French Illustrators

    George Barbier one of the Great French Illustrators

    George Barbier was one of the Great French Illustrators of the early 20th centuryRead More →

  • Jacques Gruber (1870 – 1936) French Stained Glass artist and designer

    Jacques Gruber (1870 – 1936) French Stained Glass artist and designer

    Jacques Gruber (1870-1936) was a French stained-glass artist, designer, and teacher, born Sundhausen, Alsace. He studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris, under Gustave Moreau. He was distinguished as a designer in the Art Nouveau idiom. Read More →

  • Pierre Patout (1879 – 1965) French Architect and Designer

    Pierre Patout (1879 – 1965) French Architect and Designer

    Following the war, he collaborated with his friend Emile-Jacques Ruhlmann, a decorator. They worked together on designs for the International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts, which took place in Paris from April to October 1925 and gave the style its name. Read More →

  • Jean-Charles de Castelbajac (b. 1949) French fashion designer

    Jean-Charles de Castelbajac (b. 1949) French fashion designer

    Jean-Charles de Castelbajac (b. 1949) was a French fashion designer born in Casablanca. He studied law at Faculté de Droit, Limoges and founded the Ko ready-to-wear fashion firm in 1968. He was recognised for his avant-garde designs for women’s clothing featuring unconventional materials. Read More →

  • Tachisme – The Abstract Art Movement of the French 🇫🇷

    Tachisme – The Abstract Art Movement of the French 🇫🇷

    Tachisme is frequently used interchangeably with art informel or Lyrical Abstraction to refer to the abstract art movement that flourished in Europe, particularly France, in the late 1940s and 1950s.Read More →

  • Léon Jallot (1874 – 1967) French designer and artisan

    Léon Jallot (1874 – 1967) French designer and artisan

    Léon Jallot (1874­-1967), a scion of the French Art Nouveau, stood out within the movement as an ébéniste, or cabinet maker.Read More →

  • Jean-Paul Gaultier (b.1952) French Fashion Designer

    Jean-Paul Gaultier (b.1952) French Fashion Designer

    Before launching his label in 1976, Gaultier worked for Cardin, Jacques Esteirel, and Patou. From the onset, Gaultier was dubbed the ‘enfant terrible de Paris’.Read More →

  • René Kieffer (1875 -1964) – French Bookbinder

    René Kieffer (1875 -1964) – French Bookbinder

    René Kieffer was a gilder at the Chambolle-Duru bindery for ten years. In 1903, set up his workshop at 99 boulevard St-Germain, Paris. Later he moved to 41 rue St-Andre-des-Arts and finally, in 1910, to 18 rue Seguier. A disciple of Henri Marius ­Michel, his work shifted from classical forms to motifs in the Art…

  • Art Nouveau Style – antidote to mass production and consumerism

    Art Nouveau Style – antidote to mass production and consumerism

    Art Nouveau – Everything Old is New Again It has been said about fashion today that “everything old is newRead More →

  • André Groult (1884 – 1967) French interior designer

    André Groult (1884 – 1967) French interior designer

    André Groult (1884 – 1967) was a French interior designer and furniture designer who contributed to the Art Deco movement. Curving and organic shapes, as well as vibrant materials, characterised his work. As a result, his art has been described as a blend of tradition and modernism.Read More →

  • Georges Dunaime – Art Deco -French Designer

    Georges Dunaime – Art Deco -French Designer

    Georges Dunaime designed lighting for E. Etling, the designer and engraver. His work included table lamps, torchéeres, and chandeliers made of silver, gilt, and patinated bronze with shades made of cloth, cut glass, quartz, marble, and alabaster.Read More →

  • Armand-Albert Rateau – Art Deco High Style Designer

    Armand-Albert Rateau – Art Deco High Style Designer

    Armand-Albert Rateau (1882–1938) was a French furniture designer and interior decorator. His name and work became well known for his contributions to the Art Deco style, which was gaining popularity at the time. He created the fashion house Lanvin and ran the Lanvin-Décoration interior design department on rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré. He became one of…

  • Jean Prouvé (1901 – 1984), Father of High Tech Design

    Jean Prouvé (1901 – 1984), Father of High Tech Design

    Jean Prouvé was a French metal worker, self-taught architect, and designer who bridged the gap between architecture and technology, influencing Norman Foster, Jean Nouvel, Rogers, Piano, and others. Prouvé developed the ‘murrideau’ (curtain wall) replaceable, moveable wall system and prefabricated furniture for the Université de Nancy. Jean Prouvé developed new ideas in the 1950s and…

  • Concorde a design classic

    Concorde a design classic

    Concorde was developed jointly by British Airways and Air France. Concorde was the first and remained the only supersonic civilian aircraft to be put into commercial service. Read More →

  • Marcel Gascoin and how he got inspiration from the Ocean liner?

    Marcel Gascoin and how he got inspiration from the Ocean liner?

    Marcel Gascoin (1907 – 1986) was a French furniture designer and decorator. He studied architecture, at the Ecole Nationale Superieure des Arts Décoratifs, Paris, under Henri Sauvage. Read More →

  • Marc Held (b.1932), French Designer & Architect

    Marc Held (b.1932), French Designer & Architect

    Marc Held is an architect and designer who focuses on the interaction between traditional and modern architecture, creating Limoges dinnerware, ski gear, automobiles, and homes.Read More →

  • Genêt et Michon French Lighting Manufacturers

    Genêt et Michon French Lighting Manufacturers

    Genêt et Michon was a French lighting manufacturer founded in 1911 by Philippe Genêt and Lucien Michon. After testing, they found that thick-pressed glass increased the number of reflections and brightness of light more than other types of thin glass. They were pioneers of the suspended luminous sphere and made ceiling dalles, lamps, lustres, wall…

  • René Gabriel (1890 – 1950) French Interior Designer

    René Gabriel (1890 – 1950) French Interior Designer

    René Gabriel was a follower of Francis Jourdain who made wallpaper, fabric, rugs, and porcelain for the Manufacture de Sèvres. He also designed bent-metal tubular seating and structures, and opened Ateliers d’Art, Neuilly. He taught at the Ecole des Arts Appliqués and was the director of the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs. His work…

  • Henri Navarre (1885 – 1970) French Metalworker

    Henri Navarre (1885 – 1970) French Metalworker

    Henri Navarre was a French sculptor, architect, silversmith, and glassmaker who was influenced by Maurice Marinot and exhibited his work at Galerie Edgar Brandt and Maison Geo Rouard.Read More →

  • Why was Edgar Brandt a leader in the field of ironwork?

    Why was Edgar Brandt a leader in the field of ironwork?

    Egdar Brandt was a French metalworker known for his innovative designs that incorporated traditional and modern techniques, and his work can be found in many public and private collections.Read More →

  • Christian Germanaz ( b. 1940 ) french industrial designer

    Christian Germanaz ( b. 1940 ) french industrial designer

    Germanaz designed the Half and Half seat (1964), it was manufactured by Airborne in 1968. This consisted of two identical plastic shapes clamped together to form a bench.Read More →

  • École nationale supérieure des arts décoratifs

    École nationale supérieure des arts décoratifs

    The École nationale supérieure des arts décoratifs was instrumental in the emergence of the Art Deco design movement and the development of modern design trends in the 1920s. Animation, photography, scenography, industrial design, communication design, interactive design, film, interior design, fashion, textile, and engraving are among the subjects taught at the School.Read More →

  • Maison Gripoix costume jeweller – glass with class

    Maison Gripoix costume jeweller – glass with class

    Maison Gripoix, a French costume jeweller, was located in Paris. Around 1890, Maison Gripoix sold glass beads and buttons wholesale. Subsequently, specialised in handmade imitations of precious and semi-precious jewels, including parures for Sarah Bernhardt.Read More →

  • Competition: C6 Herringbone griddle pan by Inga Sempé

    Competition: C6 Herringbone griddle pan by Inga Sempé

    The Herringbone pattern grill lines channel cooking juices to either of the two pouring spouts and the large power-grip handles optimise manoeuvrability. Read More →

  • Louis Rault (1847 – 1903) French sculptor, engraver and jewellery designer

    Louis Rault (1847 – 1903) French sculptor, engraver and jewellery designer

    Louis Rault (1847 – 1903) was a French Sculptor, engraver, silversmith and jewellery designer.Between 1868 and 1875, Rault worked in the Boucheron workshop on the Place Vendôme in Paris. At the end of the nineteenth century, he set up a workshop where he produced silver and jewellery in the Art Nouveau style.Read More →

  • Jean Goulden (1878 – 1946) French Artisan & Crafter

    Jean Goulden (1878 – 1946) French Artisan & Crafter

    Jean Goulden was a French painter, musician, and crafter who lived from 1878 to 1946. During World War I, he found Byzantine enamels near Mount Athos in Macedonia. His Cubist pendulum clocks were some of his best pieces. Only 180 of his items are known to exist.Read More →

  • Claude Garamond (1510 – 1561) made the letter a living thing

    Claude Garamond (1510 – 1561) made the letter a living thing

    Little is known about the early life of France’s most distinguished type designer Claude Garamond, though he is mentioned as being “at work” in the printing business early in the sixteenth century, Garamond was commissioned by the French monarch, Francis I, to cut a font of Greek letter which later became known as the “Royal…

  • Andre Hermant (1908 – 1978) French architect and furniture designer

    Andre Hermant (1908 – 1978) French architect and furniture designer

    In 1936, he became a member of UAM (Union des Artistes Modernes); after World War II, he participated in the reconstruction of the port of Le Havre under the direction of architect Auguste Perret.Read More →

  • Desny (1927 – 1933) French Design Firm

    Desny (1927 – 1933) French Design Firm

    Desny was a Parisian lighting company founded in 1927 by designers Desnet and René Mauny and a business partner named Tricot. READ MORERead More →

  • André Mare (1885 – 1932) french furniture designer

    André Mare (1885 – 1932) french furniture designer

    Mare André was a french painter, decorator and furniture designer. He studied painting, at the Academie Julian, Paris. Read More →

  • Pierre Balmain (1914 – 1982) French fashion designer

    Pierre Balmain (1914 – 1982) French fashion designer

    Pierre Balmain (1914 – 1982) was a French fashion designer and the influential postwar fashion house Balmain founder. He described the art of dressmaking as “the architecture of movement,” and he was known for his sophistication and elegance. LEARN MORERead More →

  • Serge Mouille (1922- 1988) French Lighting Designer

    Serge Mouille (1922- 1988) French Lighting Designer

    Serge Mouille was a French Lighting Designer; he was born and active in Paris. Mouille studied silversmithing, École des Artes Appliqués, Paris to 1941.Read More →

  • Paris Exposition des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes (1925)

    Paris Exposition des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes (1925)

    Paris Exposition des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes was a vital exhibition that gave its name to ‘Art Deco,’ a rich vein of design across a wide range of applications, from cinemas to ceramics, textiles and tableware, and graphics to graphs.Read More →

  • Galeries Lafayette – Light on the Hill of European Design

    Galeries Lafayette – Light on the Hill of European Design

    The Galeries Lafayette reported revenue of more than five billion euros in 2019. Since 1960, it has belonged to the International Association of Department Stores. It now has a number of locations in France and other countries in addition to its flagship store on Boulevard Haussmann in Paris.Read More →

  • Maurice Dufrêne (1876 – 1955), French Decorative Artist

    Maurice Dufrêne (1876 – 1955), French Decorative Artist

    Maurice Dufrêne (1876–1955) was a French decorative artist who headed the Maîtrise workshop of the Galeries Lafayette department store. He designed many different types of decorative art, including metalwork, ceramics, glass, and fabric. His designs from 1910 onward are austere and neoclassical, reminiscent of the Louis XVI style.Read More →

  • Art Nouveau: The French Aesthetic (hardcover)

    Art Nouveau: The French Aesthetic (hardcover)

    This book’s stature is rare. It took five years to compile 624 pages and 740 pictures about Art Nouveau in France. Arwas examines the movement’s development in Nancy and Paris using never-before-published pictures. The comprehensive, witty narrative extends over architecture, haute couture, and the role of women in Art Nouveau with a look at Sarah…

  • Suzanne Guiguichon (1901 – 1985) French Furniture Designer

    Suzanne Guiguichon (1901 – 1985) French Furniture Designer

    Suzanne Guiguichon was a French furniture designer and decorator. She was born and worked in Paris. Since 1929 she worked as a designer with Maurice Dufrene at the Galeries Lafayette design studio La Maitrise in Paris. Most of the furniture, clocks, lighting, fabrics, rugs, accessories Guiguichon designed anonymously.Read More →

  • Alessi PSJS Juicy Salif Citrus Squeezer (Design Classic)

    Alessi PSJS Juicy Salif Citrus Squeezer (Design Classic)

    Alessi PSJS Juicy Salif Citrus Squeezer designed by Philippe Starck On a sunny day in the spring of 1989, PhilippeRead More →

  • Pierre Paulin (1927 – 2009) French furniture designer

    Pierre Paulin (1927 – 2009) French furniture designer

    He was active in research for the government-sponsored Mobilier International. His first plastic object was the 1953 Chair 157 in polyester, ABS, and elastomers produced by Artifort of Maastricht. Around 1955, he was one of the first to work in elasticised fabrics for Thonet and subsequently for Artifort.Read More →

  • Richard Peduzzi (b.1943) French Set and Furniture Designer

    Richard Peduzzi (b.1943) French Set and Furniture Designer

    Richard Peduzzi (b.1943) is a French painter and scenic furniture designer. Education He studied drawing and sculpture under Charles Auffet.Read More →

  • SS. Normandie Art Deco Palace

    SS. Normandie Art Deco Palace

    The ship, its decor, and furniture reflected everything stylish, sophisticated, forward-thinking, and French when it was launched in the age of grand style, a decade after the successful exposition of modern design at the 1925 Paris exhibition.Read More →

  • 40+ French Designers in the applied and decorative arts

    40+ French Designers in the applied and decorative arts

    The following posts are a selection of French Designers that I have posted about over the last year. French design styles incorporate the new and the old. It is bold and sophisticated. It is attention to detail, whether a brooch, a clock, fabric, or glass. Read More →

  • Jean Schlumberger (1907 – 1987) French jewellery designer

    Jean Schlumberger (1907 – 1987) French jewellery designer

    Jean Schlumberger (1907–1987), one of the most accomplished artists of the twentieth century, produced objects of unrivalled beauty. He was a man of exquisite taste, a jeweller who created extraordinary jewelled statements with a feeling of depth and life. Read More →

  • Marcel Guillemard (1886 – 1932) French Decorator & designer

    Marcel Guillemard  (1886 – 1932) French Decorator & designer

    Marcel Guillemard (1886 – 1932) was a French decorator and furniture designer. He was born and professionally active in Paris.Read More →

  • Boris-Jean Lacroix (1902-1984) 🇫🇷 French Lighting Designer

    Boris-Jean Lacroix (1902-1984) 🇫🇷 French Lighting Designer

    Boris-Jean Lacroix (1902-1984) was a French Lighting Designer born in Paris. Biography Lacroix was a prolific designer of lighting, wallpaper,Read More →

  • Eric Anthony Bagge (1890 – 1970) French architect and designer

    Eric Anthony Bagge (1890 – 1970) French architect and designer

    Eric Anthony Bagge (1890 – 1970) was a French architect and designer. He was born in the town of Antony, near Paris.Read More →

  • Paul Poiret (1879 – 1944) – King of Fashion

    Paul Poiret (1879 – 1944) – King of Fashion

    In the early decades of the 20th century, Paul Poiret was a crucial figure in the French fashion industry, notably by adding a deep oriental flavour and rich colours to contemporary clothing. Read More →

  • Martine Bedin (b.1957) radical architecture and design

    Martine Bedin (b.1957) radical architecture and design

    Bedin was one of the founders of the avant-garde Memphis group in Milan in 1981. Also, she has worked as an architect, industrial designer and professor. Her work is held in many important museums and private collections. Bedin’s aesthetic is typically colourful and self-consciously kitschy.Read More →

  • Jan and Joel Martel (1896 – 1966) twin brothers and French sculptors

    Jan and Joel Martel (1896 – 1966) twin brothers and French sculptors

    Jan and Joel Martel (1896 – 1966) were twin brothers and French sculptors. They were born in Nantes and active in Paris. Cement, glass, steel, mirrors, ceramics, lacquers, and synthetics were all used in their projects.Read More →

  • Jean Patou (1880 – 1936) 🎩 Fashion Designer

    Jean Patou (1880 – 1936) 🎩 Fashion Designer

    One of Patou’s most famous customers was the French tennis champion Suzanne Lenglen, whom he dressed both on and off the court. This lean and active young woman epitomised the 1920s “new woman.” She created a furore in 1921 when she wore Patou’s knee-length pleated skirt, which revealed much of her legs when she ran.…

  • Andre Salomon (1891 -1970) French Lighting Engineer

    Andre Salomon (1891 -1970) French Lighting Engineer

    He was an engineer at Tompson before setting up the small electrical firm Perfécla (Perfectionnement de I’Ecla), regularly working with architects and designers, including Pierre Chareau, and André Lurcat, René Herbst, and architect Robert Mallet-Stevens. For the latter, he produced the widely published 1929 lighting fixture designed by Francis Jourdain in the form of a…

  • Groupe des Cinq French fraternity of designers

    Groupe des Cinq French fraternity of designers

    Its members included Pierre Chareau, Raymond Templier, Dominique (André Domin and Marcel Genevriere), and Pierre Legrain. In 1926 and 1927, they showed their work as the Groupe des Cinq at Galerie Barbazanges, Paris. The gallery, at 109 rue du Faubourg St. Honoré, was designed by André Lurcat. The association is not to be confused with…

  • Pierre-Émile Legrain (1889 -1929) French Furniture Designer

    Pierre-Émile Legrain (1889 -1929) French Furniture Designer

    He submitted cartoons in 1908 for Paul Iribe’s satirical reviews Le Témoin, L’Assiette au beurre, Le Mot, and La Baionnette. Iribe invited Legrain to collaborate with him on projects including furniture and interior design, jewelry for Robert Linzeler, and dress designs for Paquin.Read More →

  • Jacques Hitier (1917 – 1999) French furniture designer

    Jacques Hitier (1917 – 1999) French furniture designer

    He specialised in developing industrial furniture for public contexts like schools and government buildings after WWII. He exhibited his whole body of work at both the Salon des Artistes Décorateurs and the Salon des Arts Ménagers. Hitier also created luxury and high-end home furnishings.Read More →

  • Salon d’Automne exhibitions Paris, France

    Salon d’Automne exhibitions Paris, France

    The founders of the Salon d’Automne were a collective of artists and writers, including Eugène Carrière, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Georges Rouault, Édouard Vuillard, Joris-Karl Huysmans and Émile Verhaeren…Read More →

  • Francis Jourdain (1876 – 1958) – painter, interior designer, ceramicist

    Francis Jourdain (1876 – 1958) – painter, interior designer, ceramicist

    Francis Jourdain (1876 – 1958), the son of architect Frantz Jourdain, was born on November 2, 1876. His father created the Salon d’Automne collection. He benefited from his parents’ friendships with prominent intellectuals (Émile Zola, Alphonse Daudet) and artists of the time (the circle of Alexandre Charpentier). Read More →

  • René Lalique (1860 – 1945) French goldsmith and glassmaker

    René Lalique (1860 – 1945) French goldsmith and glassmaker

    Artisan in glass and creator of family firm Cristal Lalique René Lalique was a French glass designer, jeweller, furniture designer,Read More →

  • Eileen Gray (1879 – 1976) Irish/French Furniture Designer

    Eileen Gray (1879 – 1976) Irish/French Furniture Designer

    Eileen Gray was an French furniture designer and architect. Her work reflected a stylistic pastiche of far eastern and french influences.Read More →

  • Joseph and Pierre Moughin – French ceramicists

    Joseph and Pierre Moughin – French ceramicists

    Joseph Mougin decided to become a ceramicist after seeing an exhibition of Jean Carriès’s pottery in 1894. He set up a studio and a kiln in Montrouge with the help of sculptor friend Lemarquier and his brother Pierre Mougin.Read More →

  • Jean Adnet (1900 – 1995) French designer

    Jean Adnet (1900 – 1995) French designer

    In 1928, Jean Adnet became director of the window-display department at Galeries Lafayette, where, in 1922, brother Jacques Adnet became director of its La Maitrise decorating studio; they collaborated under the name ‘JJ Adnet.Read More →

  • Boucheron French Jewellery House

    Boucheron French Jewellery House

    Boucheron was a French court jeweller with branches in Paris, London, Biarritz, and New York. Founded by Frederic Boucheron (1858). Famous for elaborate diamond jewellery during the late 19th century. Expensive novelties shown at international exhibitions in Paris (1867 and 1900) and Philadelphia (1876) attracted wealthy customers (mainly American).Read More →

  • Formes Utiles – French Organisation and Exhibitions

    Formes Utiles – French Organisation and Exhibitions

    In 1949, Formes Utiles became an independent association of UAM (Union des Artistes Modernes) through the influence of René Herbst and Charlotte Perriand and its first exhibition held at Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris. Its theoretician was architect André Hermant.Read More →

  • Henri Vever (1854 – 1942) collector of Ukiyo-e

    Henri Vever (1854 – 1942) collector of Ukiyo-e

    Vever had acquired a collection of thousands of fine ukiyo-e prints by the early twentieth century. Vever’s collection was so well-regarded that the authors of some of the first European scholarly publications on ukiyo-e relied heavily on it for most of their actual print researchRead More →

  • ‘Exposition Universelle’ Paris 1900

    ‘Exposition Universelle’ Paris 1900

    The Exposition Universelle of 1900, better known in English as the 1900 Paris Exposition, was a world’s fair held in Paris, France, from 14 April to 12 November 1900, to celebrate the achievements of the past century and to accelerate development into the next. It was held at the esplanade of Les Invalides, the Champ…

  • Alphonse Fouquet (1828 – 1911) French Goldsmith and Jeweller

    Alphonse Fouquet (1828 – 1911) French Goldsmith and Jeweller

    His early jewellery was in neo-Greek and neo-Renaissance styles, indistinguishable from Vever, Fossin, Morel, and Mellerio.Read More →

  • René-André Coulon (1908 – 1997) furniture with tempered glass

    René-André Coulon (1908 – 1997)  furniture with tempered glass

    René-André Coulon was a furniture designer from France. He did architectural studies until 1937. In his work, Coulon integrated tempered glass, some of which Hagnauer, Vienna, made. He designed the interior furniture of Adnet for Saint-Gobain.Read More →

  • La Paresse (1924 – 1925) by George Barbier

    La Paresse (1924 – 1925) by George Barbier

    George Barbier, a French graphic artist, created this scene of cultured decadence. It is a pochoir print based on a 1924 watercolor; it appeared in the following year’s fashion annual, Falbalas et Fanfreluches. Read More →

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.