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G Righetti

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Creator: G. Righetti
Black Cassoary Drawing, Guido Righetti, 1919
By G. Righetti
Located in New York, NY
Black cassoary drawing, Guido Righetti, 1919. Original vintage Italian pencil drawings/sketches of a black cassoary in various poses from a series under...
Category

1910s Italian Vintage G Righetti

Materials

Paper

Boar Drawing, Guido Righetti, 1919
By G. Righetti
Located in New York, NY
Boar drawing, Guido Righetti, 1919. Original vintage Italian pencil drawings/sketches of a boar in various poses from a series undertaken by Righetti fo...
Category

1910s Italian Vintage G Righetti

Materials

Paper

Ocelot Drawing, Guido Righetti, 1919
By G. Righetti
Located in New York, NY
Ocelot drawing, Guido Righetti, 1919. Vintage Italian pencil drawings/sketches of an ocelot in various poses from a series undertaken by Righetti for hi...
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1910s Italian Vintage G Righetti

Materials

Paper

Elephant Drawing, Guido Righetti, 1919
By G. Righetti
Located in New York, NY
Elephant drawing, Guido Righetti, 1919. Original vintage Italian pencil drawings/sketches of an elephant in various poses from a series undertaken by Ri...
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1910s Italian Vintage G Righetti

Materials

Paper

White Cassoary Drawing, Guido Righetti, 1919
By G. Righetti
Located in New York, NY
White cassoary drawing, Guido Righetti, 1919. Original vintage Italian pencil drawings/sketches of a white cassoary in various poses from a series under...
Category

1910s Italian Vintage G Righetti

Materials

Paper

Leopard Drawing, Guido Righetti, 1919
By G. Righetti
Located in New York, NY
Leopard drawing, Guido Righetti, 1919. Original vintage Italian pencil drawings/sketches of a leopard in various poses from a series undertaken by Righe...
Category

1910s Italian Vintage G Righetti

Materials

Paper

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White Bunny Drawing by Oleg Cassini for Playboy October 1979, Signed
By Oleg Cassini
Located in Brooklyn, NY
White Bunny Drawing by Oleg Cassini for Playboy October 1979, Signed. Illustration of a woman wearing a white body suit, choker, and hat. Signed by Oleg Cassini. Notice the body suit is in the shape of the head of a bunny with clever use of the 'whiskers'. Approximate Measurements: Length: 11" Width: 14" Property from the Collection of Steven Rosengard, Chicago, Illinois This original drawing was commissioned by Playboy and included in the October 1979 issue of Playboy Magazine (pages 225-227) in a feature that included works from designers such as Bill Blass, Oleg Cassini, Edith Head, Fernando Sanchez, and Monika Tilley, among others, who create their versions of the Playboy bunny costume. Candace Collins can be seen modeling some of the designs in the feature. Oleg Cassini is an icon of twentieth-century fashion. Though born to Russian aristocracy and raised in Italy, he built a fashion empire that was unmistakably American. Cassini is perhaps best known for the hundreds of designs he created for First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy (see images 4-8), but his achievements as a collector, connoisseur, and quintessential twentieth-century man go far beyond Camelot. In 1913, Oleg Cassini was born in Paris to the Russian diplomat Count Alexander Loiewski and Countess Marguerite Cassini, a Russian aristocrat of Italian ancestry who also had an interesting link to America. The daughter of Count Arthur Cassini, Russian Ambassador to the United States during the McKinley and Roosevelt administrations, Marguerite dazzled turn-of-the-century Washington as her father’s official hostess and left her mark on the capital city. Stationed in Denmark when the Russian Revolution toppled the czar, Ambassador Cassini and family were exiled to Switzerland before settling in Florence, Italy, where young Oleg was raised. A true Renaissance man, he spoke Russian, French, and Danish before adding Italian and English; he studied medieval and modern European military history and costume and learned to draw; he learned horseback riding, fencing, and the art of chivalry; and, most importantly, he came to understand the struggles of the Russian titled class and other European aristocrats in the wake of the Russian Revolution and World War I. Countess Cassini started a successful fashion business in Florence, and soon the talented young Oleg was sent to Paris to sketch the latest collections for recreation in Italy. In Rome in his early 20s, Cassini created fashions for high society women and designed for a few films, which planted the seed for his move to Hollywood. The drive to reinvent himself brought Cassini to America in the 1930s; in his autobiography he describes arriving nearly penniless in mid-Depression New York City where his title as an exiled Russian Count meant even less than in war-devastated Europe. Down and out, Cassini struggled for employment, having sketching skills but no knowledge of the wholesale trade required for survival in Manhattan’s Seventh Avenue fashion district. However, he excelled at making connections, and Cassini slowly entered New York society. He was soon joined by younger brother Igor (who had studied in America and travelled with the young Emilio Pucci) and his parents, the once-dazzling Countess and his father, the displaced diplomat still loyal to Russia. The family settled in Washington, D.C., and Igor worked his way up the Hearst newspaper chain to become the famous society columnist Cholly Knickerbocker. In New York, Oleg Cassini married the troubled socialite Merry Fahrney (who would go on to marry eight times), but the marriage ended in scandal for Oleg, and he decided to follow his original intention and head for Hollywood. Despite initial difficulties, Cassini gained access to Hollywood’s elite (partially through his skills on the tennis court), and was soon hired as a designer at Paramount Pictures alongside the redoubtable Edith Head. In her 1941 film debut I Wanted Wings, Veronica Lake wore a memorable Cassini design. That same year, Cassini met and married the newest young Hollywood star on the scene, the beautiful 20th Century Fox–talent Gene Tierney. With the outbreak of World War II, Cassini enlisted in the Coast Guard but was transferred to the U.S. Army Cavalry which allowed officers of foreign birth. He attended basic training at Fort Riley, Kansas, and the horsemanship he learned as a boy served him greatly. He attended Officer Candidate School and reached the rank of First Lieutenant (he also became an American citizen at this time, losing his title of Count). Cassini spent several years posted at Fort Riley, where Tierney joined him before he landed a convenient military post in Hollywood. As Tierney’s career thrived (she played the title role in Otto Preminger’s Laura in 1944), she was able to assert her influence over 20th Century Fox’s head Daryl Zanuck, who hired Cassini as designer for Tierney on her 1946 film The Razor’s Edge, which proved to be a brilliant showcase for his talents. The pair separated the same year and, again seeking reinvention, Cassini re-established himself in New York City as a fashion designer. By 1950, the Oleg Cassini label was born. Combining his knowledge of Old World and modern Europe, Hollywood, the tennis courts of Palm Beach and Newport, and of course, New York City, Oleg Cassini invented a new brand of fashion that was distinctly American and of its moment. For his first collection, Cassini took to the stage, narrating the looks and imbuing the scene with his personality, unusual in an industry where the designers typically remained backstage and the models were called by number over a PA. The first collection was a smash — the president of Lord & Taylor devoted all of their storefront windows to his designs — and by 1955 sales had reached $5,000,000. Oleg Cassini’s career had turned a very positive corner. Cassini spent the early 1950s traversing the country, personally selling his collections to department stores in the interior, something his predecessors had never done, and moving between the Hollywood and New York scenes. Cassini’s brother Igor coined the term “the Jet Set” for this generation that constantly flew from New York to Los Angeles (then a ten-hour flight), Las Vegas, Paris, Rome, and the Riviera. In 1954, Cassini set out to woo Grace Kelly and sent her roses every day. The two were briefly engaged before her marriage to Prince Rainier of Monaco. In December 1960, Cassini’s career-defining opportunity came when he was chosen by Jacqueline Kennedy to design her fashions for the White House. Cassini had long known Joe Kennedy and his war-hero son John, and had first met Jacqueline Bouvier before her marriage in the early 1950s. Invited by President-Elect Kennedy to meet Jacqueline at Georgetown Hospital (she had just given birth to son John Jr.) to present to her drawings of potential dresses and First Lady looks, Cassini worked furiously to prepare a new line for the First Lady. Mrs. Kennedy had always had her clothes made by the top French couturiers of the day, but for the White House she wanted an American designer. Cassini wrote in his autobiography that he told the First Lady: “‘You have an opportunity here,’ I said, ‘for an American Versailles.’ She understood completely what I was trying to communicate; she began to talk excitedly about the need to create an entirely new atmosphere at the White House. She wanted it to become the social and intellectual capital of the nation” (Oleg Cassini, In My Own Fashion, 1987, p. 327). Mrs. Kennedy loved Cassini’s design for a gown to wear to the Inaugural Gala (she had already ordered a dress from Bergdorf’s for the Inaugural Ball), and Cassini was selected as the First Lady’s designer and was soon dubbed the “Secretary of Style.” From 1960 to 1963, Oleg Cassini would design over 300 items for Mrs. Kennedy, creating the “Jackie Look” that contributed not only to a fashion revolution but also the dawn of a new age. Cassini wrote that “Jackie played a very active role in the selection of her clothes. She loved brilliant colors — pistachio, hot pink, yellow, and white among others. Her sense of style was very precise; she would make editorial comments on the sketches I sent her. She always knew exactly what she wanted; her taste was excellent” (Oleg Cassini, In My Own Fashion, 1987, p. 334). After the Camelot years, Cassini’s business flourished and grew into a major industry; his name appeared on everything from couture to tennis-, sport-, and swimwear, car interiors, housewares, and perfume. He collected beautiful and rare artwork, arms and armor, and antique furniture, and lived the lifestyle projected by his image. From this period onward, Cassini also came to live in important homes. Of his Gothic Gramercy Park townhouse on Manhattan’s 19th Street he would write imaginatively, “I walked into the foyer and immediately fell in love. 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Mid-20th Century Italian G Righetti

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Dora Maar Drawing
By Dora Maar
Located in Barcelona, Barcelona
Pointillist composition by Dora Maar. Authenticity stamp of the auction that took place in 1998 in Paris. Black ink on cream white paper. 20th century, undated. Frame not inclu...
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1960s French Mid-Century Modern Vintage G Righetti

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Dora Maar Drawing
Dora Maar Drawing
No Reserve
H 9.45 in W 12.21 in D 0.04 in
Eau 5, Black Ink Drawing on Mylar Paper Artwork, France, 2017
By Sylvain Rieu-Piquet
Located in PARIS, FR
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Charcoal Drawing
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Early 20th-century charcoal drawing of standing nude male model in the classical tradition of the French Academy. Mounted in a custom wood frame, the image has a pensive quality, and...
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Charcoal Drawing
Charcoal Drawing
H 31 in W 24 in D 1 in
Paul Citroen Minimalist Drawing
By Paul Citroen
Located in Tilburg, NL
Bauhaus trained artist Paul Citroen (1896-1983) is famous for his graphic works and photographs. This work is beautifully simple and delicate. It’s depicting a sitting clown, but ...
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Mid-20th Century Dutch Minimalist G Righetti

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Paul Citroen Minimalist Drawing
Paul Citroen Minimalist Drawing
H 23.63 in W 15.75 in D 1.19 in
"Seated Black Nude, " Important and Rare Drawing by John Grabach
By John R. Grabach
Located in Philadelphia, PA
John Grabach, best known for his cityscapes and genre scenes, much coveted by collectors in America, was also a master of the nude, which this drawing amply demonstrates. This exampl...
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1930s American Art Deco Vintage G Righetti

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Nell Blaine Black & White Ink Drawing on Paper, USA, 1940s
By Nell Blaine
Located in New York, NY
During her first years in New York Blaine's work, which had previously been tightly realist, turned abstract, inspired by Mondrian, Leger and Jean Helion. At one time she was the you...
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1940s American Vintage G Righetti

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Robert Freiman Drawing, 1956
By Robert Freiman
Located in St.Petersburg, FL
An elegant, expressive, black ink drawing by Robert Freiman, signed and dated 1956. Robert J Freiman (b. 1917 - d. 1991), deaf from birth, was born in New York City and attended the Lexington School for the Deaf. He studied art at the National Academy of Design, Pratt Institute, the Art Students League, the Parsons School of Design, and, in Paris, at the Ecole des Beaux Arts. Freiman’s spectrum of styles evolved considerably over the course of his long career, ranging from early portraiture and realistic landscape to mixed-media works using watercolor, acrylic, and pen. He was a regular exhibitor at the Sidewalk Art...
Category

1950s American Modern Vintage G Righetti

Materials

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Robert Freiman Drawing, 1956
Robert Freiman Drawing, 1956
H 23.5 in W 18 in D 0.001 in
Drawing by Manuel Viana, Lithography in Black and White, Limited Edition
By Manuel Viana
Located in Salzburg, AT
Drawing by Manuel Viana, lithography in black and white, limited edition 135/300 signed Handcrafted wooden frame with white gilt decoration, non-reflecting glass Biography: The art...
Category

1970s French Modern Vintage G Righetti

Materials

Glass, Wood, Crayon

Dora Maar Drawing
By Dora Maar
Located in Barcelona, Barcelona
Pointillist composition by Dora Maar, circa 1960. Authenticity stamp of the auction that took place in 1998 in Paris. Black ink on cream white paper. 20th century, undated. ...
Category

1960s French Mid-Century Modern Vintage G Righetti

Materials

Paper

Dora Maar Drawing
Dora Maar Drawing
No Reserve
H 20.48 in W 24.02 in D 0.79 in
Black and White Charcoal Drawing
Located in Pasadena, CA
Mysterious subject for this charcoal painting in a cerused frame. Beautiful work but unfortunately signature eligible.
Category

1960s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage G Righetti

Materials

Paper

Black and White Charcoal Drawing
Black and White Charcoal Drawing
H 27.25 in W 33.75 in D 2 in

G. Righetti furniture for sale on 1stDibs.

G. Righetti furniture are available for sale on 1stDibs. These distinctive items are frequently made of paper and are designed with extraordinary care. There are many options to choose from in our collection of G. Righetti furniture, although gray editions of this piece are particularly popular. If you’re looking for additional options, many customers also consider furniture by Luigi Veronesi, Giovanni Petucco, and Enrico Baj. Prices for G. Righetti furniture can differ depending upon size, time period and other attributes — on 1stDibs, these items begin at $2,850 and can go as high as $3,350, while a piece like these, on average, fetch $3,150.

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