Details
- Dimensions
- 77ʺW × 36ʺD × 30ʺH
- Styles
- Art Deco
- Arm Height
- 25.0 in
- Number of Seats
- 4
- Seat Height
- 14.0 in
- Styled After
- Donald Deskey
- Period
- 1980s
- Country of Origin
- United States
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
Shop Sustainably with Chairish
- Materials
- Chrome
- Textile
- Wood
- Condition
- Good Condition, Original Condition Unaltered, Some Imperfections
- Color
- Gray
- Condition Notes
- In excellent overall condition with minimal signs of use. See photos for details. In excellent overall condition with minimal signs of use. See photos for details. less
- Description
-
A very fine and rare example of Donald Deskey’s Streamline Art Deco Industrial designs. Inspired by the originals and produced …
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A very fine and rare example of Donald Deskey’s Streamline Art Deco Industrial designs. Inspired by the originals and produced in limited edition in the 1980s. A rare combination of colors and immaculately preserved.
Well constructed and upholstered in gray and black Naugahyde with pink piping and chrome accents.
Couch Length 77”
Depth 36”
Height 30”
Interior Width 67”
Interior Depth 20”
Seat Height 14”
Arm Height 25”
Chair Width 34”
Depth 36”
Interior Depth 20”
Interior Width 23”
Height 28”
Ottoman
Width 24”
Depth 18”
Height 13”
About the Designer:
Donald Sidney Deskey was born in Blue Earth, Minnesota. He studied architecture at the University of California, but did not follow that profession, becoming instead an artist and a pioneer in the field of Industrial design. He attended the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes in Paris, which influenced his approach to design. He went on to establish a design consulting firm in New York City and later the firm of Deskey-Vollmer (in partnership with Phillip Vollmer), which specialized in furniture and textile design. His designs in this era progressed from Art Deco to Streamline Moderne.
Deskey first gained attention as a designer with his window displays for the Franklin Simon Department Store in Manhattan in 1926. In the 1930s, he won the competition to design Radio City Music Hall's interiors. He also sold geometrically painted objects through the fashionable shop of Rena Rosenthal, and did custom design work for her. In the 1940s, he started the graphic design firm Donald Deskey Associates and made some of the most recognizable icons of the day, including the Crest toothpaste packaging, the Tide bullseye, as well as a widely used New York City lamppost model. In 1940, Deskey developed a decorative form of plywood, which had a unique striated, or combed, look. Produced under the name Weldtex, it became very popular in the 1950s.
His company is still in operation in Cincinnati. A collection of his work is held by the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum.[He died in Vero Beach, Florida, the town to which he had retired in 1975. less
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