Our webstore uses cookies to offer a better user experience and we consider that you are accepting their use if you keep browsing the website.
Robert Mathieu (born 1921) studied metal-turning in bronze at the École Boulle school of applied arts and crafts, but would later go on to invent some of the most exceptional lighting designs of his times.
0 item in stock items in stock
Shipped within 3 to 6 days
Last product in stock!
Model | 9788836651924 |
Artist | Robert Mathieu |
Author | Pascal Cuisinier |
Publisher | Silvana |
Format | Ouvrage relié |
Number of pages | 272 |
Language | Bilingue Français / English |
Dimensions | 280 x 250 |
Technique(s) | Illustrations 520 |
Published | 2023 |
This first monograph on Robert Mathieu is the fruit of research carried out by Pascal Cuisinier who, since the early 2000s, has been an aficionado of French post-World War II design. Focusing on the academic and the aesthetic aspects in equal measure, this study aims to introduce the work of Robert Mathieu to both newcomers and informed collectors, and to shed some light on the period of renewed prosperity experienced by the decorative arts in France during the thirty-year economic expansion known as the Trente Glorieuses.
Following the urgent rebuilding phase in France after the end of World War II, a whole new housing-based economy emerged, built on the great French traditions of interior design and home furnishing.
A new generation, fresh from the most prestigious schools, was quick to grasp the opportunities offered by this economy, laying the foundations of what we now call “design” – namely, devising goods for mass production.
Robert Mathieu was part of this generation, bringing his boundless creativity and perfectly mastered technical skills to the table. He designed articulated lamps for every task in the modern home, putting to good use his unparalleled ability in tackling asymmetry and creating double-counterweighted systems unlike anything seen elsewhere.
Contents
Introduction
Biography
I remember
Critical analysis
Portfolio
Catalogue
Exhibition
Recently viewed items