International Style Mirrors
The International Style, a modernist movement within architecture and furniture design that was given its name by American architect Philip Johnson and historian Henry-Russell Hitchcock, was born during the 1920s and ’30s. It gained steam initially in Europe and then in the United States as a response to the first World War. Building projects associated with the movement, as well as vintage International Style chairs, tables and other furnishings, are minimal and pared back.
Pioneers of the International Style — architect Walter Gropius and his Bauhaus colleagues Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Marcel Breuer, De Stijl advocate and Dutch architect J.J.P. Oud and visionary designer Le Corbusier — stripped away decorative elements and placed considerable value on functionality and clean lines, integrating the use of industrial materials like steel, concrete and large sheets of glass in their work. Quite aptly, this mode of design and architectural style coincided with an era now known as the Machine Age and became a global symbol of modernism. The primary motive of its practitioners was to address the changing needs of a rapidly industrializing society, especially the demand for office complexes and apartments in large cities, through economical, technologically advanced, yet aesthetically pleasing designs for furniture and buildings.
“Space and light and order. Those are the things that men need just as much as they need bread or a place to sleep,” said Le Corbusier of the philosophy behind his practical modernist architecture.
The International Style’s designers and architects were inspired by the advantages afforded them by the era’s new technology and industrial machinery as well as state-of-the-art materials. Le Corbusier was fond of framing his buildings in steel but reinforced concrete made far more economic sense. He is probably most admired for the iconic private homes and commercial buildings that he designed or codesigned with his cousin Pierre Jeanneret, which are spread across the world, from New York City to Paris to Chandigarh, India. Today, Breuer’s Wassily Lounge chair; the elegant LC series created by Le Corbusier, Jeanneret and Charlotte Perriand; and Mies van der Rohe’s Barcelona chair, crafted with his romantic partner, designer Lilly Reich, are emblems of progressive modernist design and all make prominent use of tubular steel. Vintage originals are the prized cornerstone of collections.
“The International Style is probably the first fundamentally original and widely distributed style since the Gothic,” posited Johnson in the book that accompanied “Modern Architecture: International Exhibition,” an architectural show he cocurated with Hitchcock that featured the work of Frank Lloyd Wright, Le Corbusier, Richard Neutra and others. While the term “International Style” had previously been circulating in Europe, when the show opened at the Museum of Modern Art in 1932, it yielded a much broader application of this important style of design.
Find International Style furniture on 1stDibs.
2010s French International Style Mirrors
Rattan
1930s French Vintage International Style Mirrors
Oak
17th Century American Antique International Style Mirrors
Metal, Tin
20th Century International Style Mirrors
Bamboo, Mirror
2010s Spanish International Style Mirrors
Glass
Late 20th Century American International Style Mirrors
Glass
2010s Italian International Style Mirrors
Steel
1920s French Vintage International Style Mirrors
Copper
Mid-20th Century French International Style Mirrors
Mirror, Wicker, Rattan
Early 20th Century Japanese International Style Mirrors
Wood
21st Century and Contemporary Swiss International Style Mirrors
Mirror, Precious Stone
2010s Italian International Style Mirrors
Leather, Mirror
20th Century French International Style Mirrors
Iron
Mid-20th Century Austrian International Style Mirrors
Wood
Early 20th Century International Style Mirrors
Brass
15th Century and Earlier Antique International Style Mirrors
Mirror
1970s Unknown Vintage International Style Mirrors
Bamboo, Rattan
20th Century Italian International Style Mirrors
Mirror
Mid-20th Century International Style Mirrors
Mahogany
Late 19th Century Antique International Style Mirrors
Mirror
1960s French Vintage International Style Mirrors
Bronze
1960s French Vintage International Style Mirrors
Bronze
Early 2000s French International Style Mirrors
Crystal, Metal
20th Century Guatemalan International Style Mirrors
Wood
Late 20th Century Guatemalan International Style Mirrors
Wood