Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Though much of Arthur Umanoff's furniture is marked by a no-frills simplicity common in American mid-century modern design, his work is anything but one-note. Over the course of a prolific career, Umanoff designed everything from case pieces to candleholders to magazine racks to dining chairs in iron, leather, walnut, wicker and more. With furnishings for a broad range of manufacturers throughout the ’50s, ’60s, ’70s and early ’80s, Umanoff continued a thread of sculptural elegance and textural sensitivity through his designs.
After graduating from Pratt Institute in the early 1950s, Umanoff experimented mostly with wood furniture before landing a job at Post Modern Ltd, a New York manufacturer of wrought-iron furniture. There he produced furnishings that married wrought iron with wood and plastic, creating functional pieces free of utilitarian bulkiness.
Umanoff continued his experimentation with mixed materials through a partnership with Shaver Howard, for whom he designed wine racks in combinations of iron, leather and wicker.
When Shaver Howard bought Boyeur Scott, Umanoff conceived several furniture designs for the brand, including the 1964 Granada collection, whose curlicue iron bases, visible through glass tops, stand out as some of his most ornate and decorative work. Indeed, much of Umanoff’s oeuvre is far more simplistic, like iron-and-pine armchairs for The Elton Co. or low-backed, slatted-seat barstools with slender iron legs for Raymor.
Umanoff was fluent, too, in the more sumptuous modernism of the era: In the mid-1960s, he designed the 2405 and 4449 armchairs for Madison Furniture Industries. Popular in offices, the walnut-framed, leather-upholstered seats, which could have been mistaken for the seductive Scandinavian modern seating of the era, were reportedly the jumping-off point for Captain Kirk’s iconic seat on Star Trek.
Even as he is among the mid-century modern designers you may not know, with work across such a range of styles and manufacturers (most no longer in business), Umanoff, who died in 1985, leaves a legacy that is fascinatingly diverse and at times enticingly elusive, making his work intriguing objects for collectors.
Find vintage Arthur Umanoff bar stools, tables, benches and other furniture today on 1stDibs.
Mid-20th Century Haitian Bohemian Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Wicker, Wood
Mid-20th Century Mid-Century Modern Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Cane, Wood
1960s Haitian Mid-Century Modern Vintage Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Rattan, Wood
1960s Danish Mid-Century Modern Vintage Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Teak, Glass
1950s Vintage Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Satinwood, Paint
2010s Italian Modern Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Marble
21st Century and Contemporary Romanian Grand Tour Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Wood
20th Century Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Brass
1950s Austrian Mid-Century Modern Vintage Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Brass
1960s Danish Mid-Century Modern Vintage Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Glass, Teak
21st Century and Contemporary Romanian Grand Tour Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Wood
21st Century and Contemporary Romanian Grand Tour Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Wood
Late 20th Century American Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Metal
21st Century and Contemporary Romanian Grand Tour Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Wood
21st Century and Contemporary Romanian Modern Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Wood
1950s American Vintage Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Iron
1950s American Vintage Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Iron
1950s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage Arthur Umanoff Serving Pieces
Wrought Iron