Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
For French interior and furniture designer Jean-Michel Frank (1895–1941), history always had a great allure. He once wrote, “The noble frames that came to us from the past can receive today’s creations.” His career celebrated heritage while promoting new modes of 20th-century design, and it flourished between the World Wars when Frank designed interiors that tastefully mixed extravagance with sophisticated simplicity, often featuring pieces he made with his business partner, cabinetmaker Adolphe Chanaux.
It took personal tragedy for Frank to realize his calling. Frank had been exempted from the World War I draft due to his physical frailty but his brothers both served and died on the front. When his German father applied for French naturalization, he was rejected and placed under house arrest, killing himself shortly after. His mother went into a deep depression and began undergoing psychiatric treatment and died a few years later.
With his large inheritance, Frank joined the Paris culture crowd and there got his start in the burgeoning field of interior design. His signature style, which became known as “luxe pauvre” — “impoverished luxury” — was characterized by clean lines, mixed materials and hard-to-miss details. His interiors for clients including Nelson Rockefeller and Elsa Schiaparelli featured artwork by modern creators like Diego and Alberto Giacometti, Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse. Favoring the color white, he would consider each element of his spartan rooms as part of the whole, from bronze doors to plush antique furnishings, always tastefully rich yet never decadent. He worked on furniture with Chanaux that reinforced this austere style. Some of his most well-known furniture pieces, including the Croisillon table lamps, the Parsons table, brass tripod gueridons and the leather Comfortable chairs that used the Hermès saddle stitch, are extremely simple in their elegant appearance. This attention to refined details, simple luxury and the cohesion of design in a room made him one of the leading tastemakers of 1930s Paris.
After fleeing the Nazi occupation of France (he was part of a Jewish family that included his distant cousin, the diarist Anne Frank), Frank arrived in New York where he killed himself at the age of 46. His commitment to creating home interiors where comfort and fine art could merge and styles could mix in harmony remains influential in design.
Browse Jean-Michel Frank furniture on 1stDibs.
1930s French Vintage Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Iron
20th Century Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Leather, Wood
1950s French Art Deco Vintage Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Wood
Late 19th Century English Victorian Antique Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Wood
Early 20th Century Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Leather, Wood
Mid-20th Century Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Leather
Mid-20th Century French Mid-Century Modern Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Rock Crystal, Wrought Iron
18th Century English George I Antique Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Mahogany
1930s French Modern Vintage Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Iron, Wrought Iron
1940s Chinese Chinoiserie Vintage Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Wood
Early 20th Century Syrian Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Bone, Wood, Ebony
1810s English Regency Antique Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Macassar, Rosewood
2010s British Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Ebony, Walnut
1940s French Vintage Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Iron
1930s French Vintage Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Iron
1940s French Vintage Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Iron
1930s Argentine Art Deco Vintage Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Brass
1970s French Modern Vintage Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Wicker, Plaster
1970s French Modern Vintage Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Wicker, Plaster
1970s French Modern Vintage Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Wicker, Plaster
21st Century and Contemporary French Art Deco Jean-Michel Frank Furniture
Leather
Jean-michel Frank furniture for sale on 1stDibs.
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