Jean-Charles Moreux for Maison Ramsay, in the style of.
Rectangular coffee tabale in gilded iron resting on four curved legs with stylized horse heads and hooves connected by two X-shaped crossbars. Plateau in glass.
Work done in the 1950s.
Jean-Charles Moreux (1889-1956) was a French architect who was interested in many fields throughout his career, including painting and astronomy. During his studies at the National School of Fine Arts in Paris, he met André Lurçat, also an architect, who influenced him in the creation of purist-inspired houses. As an architect for private clients, such as the Véra brothers, whose villa he refurbished in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, or Jacques Doucet and Robert de Rotschild, he also carried out public commissions, such as the refurbishment of the painting galleries in the Louvre Museum and, in particular, the Médicis Gallery.
Founded at the beginning of the 20th century, Ramsay House specialized in furniture and decoration and achieved its greatest fame in the 1950s thanks to its work with glass and gilded metal as well as with marble and stone in pieces of neoclassical inspiration
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Maison Ramsay:Gilded iron coffee table
from the 20th century. 1950's
Vendu
3100 €








Period:
XX th c.
Style:
1950s
Material:
Iron
Signatures:
Ramsay House
Origin:
France
Manufacture:
After 1945
- Widht :
- 50 cm (19,5 In)
- Height :
- 43 cm (16,77 In)
- Length :
- 93 cm (36.27 In)
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