Pair of Faux-Bamboo Bronze and Brass Floor Lamps, by Jacques Adnet, French Work, circa 1940
Pair of faux-bamboo bronze and brass floor lamps. French work by Jacques Adnet. Circa 1940. Dimensions: W. 55 cm × D. 55 cm × H. 168 cm (W. 21.65 × D. 21.65 × H. 66.14 inch).
PRODUCT DETAILS
| Dimensions en CM | 55 x 55 x 168 cm |
|---|---|
| Dimensions en INCH | 21.65 x 21.65 x 66.14 inch |
| Période | 1930–1940 |
| Style | Art Deco |
| Matériaux | Bronze |
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
Combining the naturalistic fantasy of the faux-bamboo motif with a refined material palette of bronze and brass, this exceptional pair of floor lamps embodies the distinctive aesthetic intelligence of Jacques Adnet. Standing 168 cm in height, they command space with effortless authority, their warm metallic tones shifting subtly between the depth of the bronze and the bright clarity of the brass — an interplay of materials as sophisticated as the designer himself.
Jacques Adnet (1900–1984) was among the most gifted and versatile figures of twentieth-century French design. After training at the École des Arts Décoratifs, he assumed the directorship of La Compagnie des Arts Français in 1928, bringing to that venerable house an aesthetic rigour that would define French luxury interiors for decades. Celebrated for his masterful use of leather, metal and lacquer, Adnet developed a formal language at once modern and deeply rooted in the French decorative tradition.
Dating from the period 1930–1940, this pair represents Adnet at the height of his creative powers, deploying the fashionable faux-bamboo vocabulary with characteristic wit and discipline. The combination of bronze and brass, the assured proportions, and the subtle interplay of textures make these lamps objects of exceptional decorative power. Whether placed in a period interior or used as counterpoints in a contemporary space, they carry with them the authority of one of France's great designers.
SIMILAR SELECTIONS