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Screens and Room Dividers For Sale
Period: 1930s
Period: 1940s
Art Deco Wrought Iron Fire Screen
Located in Saint-Ouen, FR
Art Deco wrought iron fire screen, with golden antelope, double sided. Measures: Thickness 1.5cm.   
Category

1930s French Art Deco Vintage Screens and Room Dividers

Materials

Wrought Iron

Paolo Buffa Handles Brass, 1940, Italy
Located in Milano, IT
Paolo Buffa handles brass, 1940 Italy.
Category

1940s Italian Other Vintage Screens and Room Dividers

Materials

Brass

Art Deco Wrought Iron Fire Screen
Located in Saint-Ouen, FR
Art Deco wrought iron fire screen, with golden antelope, double sided. Measures: Thickness 1.5cm.   
Category

1930s French Art Deco Vintage Screens and Room Dividers

Materials

Wrought Iron

Japanese Decorated Lacquer and Painted Folding Screen
Located in Godshill, Isle of Wight
Japanese Decorated Lacquer and Painted Folding Screen This impressive screen has four superbly decorated panels with a montage of Geisha, Japanese Garden and Animals all made from ...
Category

1930s Japonisme Vintage Screens and Room Dividers

Materials

Lacquer

Sensational Turquoise Scrubbed Wood and Caned 3 Panel Screen
Located in Hopewell, NJ
A stunning 3 panel screen having turquoise Caribbean blue painted scrubbed wood frame and feet with natural colored caning on the panels. 71” H middle panel 68” H side panels.  
Category

1940s French Vintage Screens and Room Dividers

Materials

Cane, Wood

Two art deco room dividers, decorated with arrows and ropes circa 1940
Located in Saint-Ouen, FR
Two art deco room dividers, decorated with arrows and ropes in lacquered and gilded metal, circa 1940 Each roomm divide measures 63"x56" (160x141 cm) so for the two rooms divide 63"x...
Category

1940s French Art Deco Vintage Screens and Room Dividers

Materials

Wrought Iron

c.1930 Mediterranean Resort Painted Steel Screen
Located in Chicago, IL
Unique resort furniture with floral motifs once dominated the Mediterranean coast, where it was very popular with visitors and locals alike. Made from steel with original paint, these screens were utilized as mobile dressing areas when dressed with fabric. Today they are wonderful accents from a past romantic era...
Category

1930s French Vintage Screens and Room Dividers

Materials

Metal

Salvador Corona Folding 4 Panel Floor Screen of Patzcuaro, Acapulco circa 1938
Located in Camden, ME
Salvador Corona painted four-panel wooden floor screen created in his studio in Mexico circa 1938. This rare hand crafted multi medium room divider was the property of the daughter of one of Mexico's wealthiest families of the period, who married the head of an international railroad supply company in their Warren McArthur furnished apartment on Park Avenue. The custom designed Warren McArthur furniture was a gift of the Pullman Company. In the early 1950s she opened a shop in Boothbay, Maine and later on upper Lexington Avenue specializing in the crafts of Mexico. This may have been a wedding present to her from the artist, her family or a close friend. The screen shows a the harbor of 19th Century Acapulco with the major buildings with gold leaf tiled roofs, Spanish galleons in the bay, a whale spouting in the distance, birds, and silver leafed palm trees . The harbor scene is bordered in gilt painted cord. Within which are appliquéd cutout medallions of various local fish and air bubbles covered in tinfoil ,a new material in the 30s. The tinfoil is finely etched in a variety of intricate patterns. Some of the appliqués are glazed in gold. The reverse side of the screen is an ivory white back ground with vignettes from the Maximilian era of Mexico. The screen is in good condition with wear consistent with its age. Salvador Corona was born on his family's ranch Hacienda Mideras in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. Corona’s family moved to Mexico City in 1903 when he was 8. He attended the New English College in Mexico and then crossed into a career in bull fighting entering the ring for the first time in 1913. In 1919 in Guadalajara he was gored and turned to painting. He was given his first painting lessons by fellow bullfighter Jose Jimenez. Corona’s painting career spanned many decades and diverse formats including murals, furniture and decorative household items. In 1939, the Mexican government invited him to exhibit a set of painted furniture at it's booth at the World’s Fair in New York City. There, it was presented to President Franklin D. Roosevelt as a gift. Corona’s work attracted many famous patrons, including the Duchess of Windsor, Gary Cooper and writer Clare Booth Luce. Salvador Corona’s work featured many Spanish Colonial vignettes, and he became an authority on Spanish and French costumes of the 1800s, which are frequently depicted in his paintings. His favorite subjects often included Mexican Colonial criollos and Purepecha (Tarascan) Indians. Birds and other animals feature prominently in his work. His traditional self-developed folk art style images depicted pastoral colorful scenes of Maximilian era Mexico painted on white backgrounds. His work can be divided into three categories: a vice-regal era with European and Creole noblemen mixed with Indians; stylized landscapes of Patscuaro, Acapulco or the Canal of Santa Anita; and his iconographic Mexican Virgins...
Category

1930s Mexican Rancho Monterey Vintage Screens and Room Dividers

Materials

Foil, Gold Leaf

Italian mid-century Fire screen in crafted wood with floral decorations, 1940s
Located in MIlano, IT
Italian mid-century Fire screen in crafted wood with floral decorations, 1940s Shaped floor fire screen, entirely in dark wood. The front of the fireplace screen has scattered floral...
Category

1940s Italian Mid-Century Modern Vintage Screens and Room Dividers

Materials

Wood

Vintage Screens and Antique Room Dividers on 1stDibs: Japanese Screens, Chinese Screens and Art Deco Screens for Sale

Whether they are implemented as decorative accents or makeshift partitions to ensure privacy, antique and vintage folding screens and room dividers easily introduce sophistication and depth to any space in your home.

The earliest examples of folding screens are said to have originated in China and go back at least as far as the Han dynasty. Screens of the era were heavy structures made of wood and had hinges of cloth or leather. They were adorned with elaborate landscape paintings that were typically created on silk or paper canvases and applied directly to the screen’s panels afterward. Just as they had been in the 20th century and today, the folding screens then were recognized for both their practical and purely decorative properties.

Japanese room-divider screens were also decorated with paintings but constructed to be lightweight and mobile. They took on considerable event-based importance when the structures gained popularity in the East Asian country, as the folding screens were used in performing arts such as concerts, tea ceremonies and more. Later, artists elsewhere warmed to folding screens and sought to create their own.

In European countries such as France, where they were known as paravent, folding screens began to materialize in apartments in Paris, gaining favor with the likes of pioneering couturier Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel, who is said to have accrued more than 30 and used them as a precursor to what we now know as wallpaper.

On 1stDibs, find a wide range of antique and vintage folding screens and room dividers, which, given their history, may do a better job of bringing people and cultures together in your home than sectioning off a space. Search by material to find options in metal, fabric or wood, or browse by style for mid-century modern designs and examples from the Art Deco era.

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