Holly Hunt Chairs
The success of Holly Hunt — both the designer and her eponymous empire of textile and furnishings showrooms — is based on instinct.
The Chicago-based Hunt trusts her own tastes, reflected in her signature lines of elegant, low-key furniture, lighting and fabrics. She also trusts her judgment about the wants of the buying public, and this savvy sensibility has allowed her to cultivate and market the work of a range of contemporary talents, from minimalists like Christian Liaigre to eccentrics like Christian Astuguevieille.
Hunt is a design world impresario — a prominent arbiter for stylish modern interiors and known foremost for fabrics, seating designs and light fixtures. Modern sophistication, attention to detail, and a desire to cultivate talented contemporary designers are at the crux of the company’s success.
Born in central Texas to schoolteacher parents, Hunt was a creative girl who made her own clothes and bickered with her mother about decor. After graduating from Texas Tech, Hunt worked as department-store buyer and costume jewelry designer before marrying and helping her husband build a multimillion dollar transport company. Her hobby was decorating their homes. After the two divorced, Hunt purchased a showroom in the Chicago Merchandise Mart in 1983. Within 10 years, she was winning applause for her understated designs, her lavish showroom parties and her eye for rising design stars. Liaigre was her first discovery. Correctly surmising that his pared-down furniture in dark wood would play well in the United States in the aftermath of the go-go ’80s, Hunt began marketing the French designer’s work in 1994.
Over the subsequent years Hunt has added a half-dozen showrooms and, following her own style barometer, has taken on other fresh talents, including glassmaker Alison Berger, French designer Christophe Pillet and couturier Ralph Rucci, making a foray into home design.
One constant over that time have been the aesthetics of Hunt’s own designs. Her fabrics — the first choice of many dealers when re-upholstering vintage seating — are understated, mixing muted colors and updates of classic patterns. Her furniture is simple and refined. As you will see on 1stDibs, the name Holly Hunt represents a sense of timelessness and sophistication.
20th Century French Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Cane, Oak
20th Century Polish Mid-Century Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Velvet, Beech
Early 20th Century French Louis XVI Holly Hunt Chairs
Wood
Late 19th Century Spanish Spanish Colonial Antique Holly Hunt Chairs
Cane, Walnut
Mid-20th Century Swedish Gustavian Holly Hunt Chairs
Birch
Mid-20th Century Swedish Gustavian Holly Hunt Chairs
Birch
Early 20th Century French Louis XVI Holly Hunt Chairs
Wood
20th Century Polish Mid-Century Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Velvet, Beech
Late 20th Century Italian Holly Hunt Chairs
Leather, Wood
20th Century Polish Mid-Century Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Velvet, Beech
20th Century Polish Mid-Century Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Velvet, Beech
20th Century Polish Mid-Century Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Textile, Beech
20th Century Polish Mid-Century Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Velvet, Beech
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Oak
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Walnut
20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Velvet, Walnut
Early 2000s American Holly Hunt Chairs
Wood, Velvet
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Cotton
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Cotton
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Aluminum
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Leather
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Leather, Walnut
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Walnut, Leather
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Upholstery, Walnut
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Holly Hunt Chairs
Leather