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Gilbert Rohde for Herman Miller Credenza or Cabinet

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  • Gilbert Rohde Cabinet for Herman Miller
    By Herman Miller, Gilbert Rohde
    Located in Philadelphia, PA
    Gilbert Rohde Cabinet from the Mahogany Series dating to the late 1930's. Refinished about 10 years ago in a Satin Black Finish. Still presents pretty well but not perfect. Retains O...
    Category

    Vintage 1930s American Art Deco Cabinets

    Materials

    Metal

  • Gilbert Rohde Streamline Art Deco Cabinet Credenza Server
    By Gilbert Rohde
    Located in Rockaway, NJ
    Mid-Century Modern compact art deco two door credenza server cabinet by Gilbert Rhode. Burl wood front doors mahogany case.
    Category

    20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Cabinets

    Materials

    Mahogany, Burl

  • Gilbert Rohde for Herman Miller Display Cabinet from Formal Dining Room Line
    By Herman Miller, Gilbert Rohde
    Located in Philadelphia, PA
    Gilbert Rohde formal dining room display/ China cabinet. Designed in the mid 1930's, unique design that has glass corners and combination of exotic ...
    Category

    Vintage 1930s American Art Deco Vitrines

    Materials

    Stainless Steel

  • Art Deco Server Étagère by Gilbert Rohde for Herman Miller
    By Herman Miller, Gilbert Rohde
    Located in Port Jervis, NY
    Fabulous and hard to find server/étagère cabinet by Gilbert Rohde for Herman Miller. C1930 early days of Gilbert and Herman Miller collaboration. Two drawers stacked alongside two doors with two large open shelves...
    Category

    Vintage 1930s American Art Deco Sideboards

    Materials

    Aluminum

  • Gilbert Rohde for Herman Miller Paldao Group Bookcases, Newly Refinished
    By Gilbert Rohde, Herman Miller
    Located in South Bend, IN
    An extremely rare and exceptional pair of Mid-Century Modern bookcase cabinets Designed by Gilbert Rohde for Herman Miller "Paldao Group" USA, 1940s Exotic book-matched pald...
    Category

    Vintage 1940s American Mid-Century Modern Bookcases

    Materials

    Glass, Paldao

  • Gilbert Rohde Paldao Cabinet for Herman Miller
    By Herman Miller, Gilbert Rohde
    Located in Hanover, MA
    Gilbert Rohde designed this chest for Herman Miller as part of his 1941 Paldao Line of streamline modernist and modular furniture in exotic veneer. This is model no. 4103, two-door cabinet with distinctively incised large round pulls, interior fitted with two adjustable shelves behind the left door and five pull-out drawers behind the right door, fronts finished in black enamel. The case top and sides are Paldao wood; the doors are in highly figured burl Acacia. The finish is called "Beaver" which is natural color, no stain, satin varnish. The back is numbered "4130." All of Rohde's designs for Herman Miller are marked with a 4-digit number; the first two numbers indicate the year, and the second two numbers indicate the individual piece. Newly refinished and ready to place in your home. The Herman Miller Furniture Company was devoted to manufacturing period reproduction furniture until Pioneer industrial designer Gilbert Rohde walked into their Grand Rapids showroom in 1930. A devout modernist, Rohde convinced D.J. De Pree to focus on modern furniture throughout the 1930s, and to produce exclusively modern furniture by the time Rohde died in 1944. Work by the pioneering American industrial and furniture designer, Gilbert Rohde, is notable for its thoroughly modern, informal, and multifunctional qualities. Rohde’s ability to create appealing modernist furnishings for middle-class homes, while also devising merchandising strategies to sell these goods, places him within a unique framework in American design history. Born and raised in New York, Rohde was the son of a cabinetmaker. He attended New York City public schools and his post-high school education included courses at the Art Students League and the Grand Central School of Art. Rohde’s visit to Europe in the spring and summer of 1927 (with later trips in 1931 and 1937) to see the Bauhaus in Dessau and the French modernist design that debuted in the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes in Paris, profoundly inspired his concept of design and the role it should play in daily life. The French Art Deco and German rationalist styles he saw in Europe influenced the furniture he designed from the late 1920s into the 1940s, pieces he created to suit a rapidly changing American lifestyle. In addition to his work for Herman Miller Inc., Rohde also designed for several other furniture firms, including Thonet, Troy Sunshade, and Heywood-Wakefield. What set Rohde apart from his contemporaries was his all-encompassing understanding of the furniture industry, from design and production to marketing and showroom display.[1] During his time with Herman Miller Inc. (1932-1944), Rohde set the standard for collaborative efforts between designers and furniture firms, with George Nelson and Charles and Ray Eames later...
    Category

    Vintage 1940s American Mid-Century Modern Commodes and Chests of Drawers

    Materials

    Mahogany

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