A unique carved chandelier
A unique carved chandelier

DESIGNED BY MAURICE DUFRENE, CIRCA 1913

Details
A unique carved chandelier
Designed by Maurice Dufrene, circa 1913
Three-tiered chandelier elaborately carved with eighteen graduated branches, cream opalescent tulip shades
90½in. (230cm.) approximate height
Provenance
Paul Watel

Lot Essay

This remarkable chandelier was designed by Maurice Dufrène for Paul Watel of whom relatively little is known. What is certain is that in 1913 Watel moved into a new building designed by André Granet, the son-in-law of Gustave Eiffel, on the rue Marceau; his apartment was equipped with every modern convenience from electricity to central heating and filtered water.
Dufrène the leading decorator of the day was charged with creating a suitably impressive interior. Trained at the Maison Moderne from 1889, he was a founding member of the Société des Artistes Décorateurs and was noted for his distinctive and progressive style. The chandelier was undoubtedly the highlight of the apartment and the unusual choice of material, the dramatic size and singular pierced decoration (so redolent of the work of later designers such as Prouvé) attest to his avant-garde approach.

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