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Art Deco Walnut Cocktail Dry Bar Cabinet, circa 1930s

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  • Art Deco Walnut Cocktail Cabinet, Dry Bar, English, circa 1930
    Located in Devon, England
    Gorgeous and original 1930s Art Deco cocktail cabinet in figured walnut. This cabinet really is stunning, featuring a storage area for bottles at the bottom and glasses etc. at the t...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century English Art Deco Dry Bars

    Materials

    Glass, Mirror, Bakelite, Walnut

  • Art Deco Blonde Bird's-Eye Maple Cocktail Cabinet Dry Bar, English, circa 1930s
    Located in Devon, England
    This hugely stylish Art Deco cocktail drinks cabinet is a fantastic piece of Art Deco furniture and it's internal features prove to be an incredibly appealing feature. The beautifull...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century English Art Deco Dry Bars

    Materials

    Mirror, Bakelite, Birdseye Maple

  • Art Deco Walnut Pop Up Cocktail Drinks Dry Bar Table, circa 1930
    Located in Devon, England
    For your consideration is this rather fun and stylish original Art Deco English pop up cocktail table. When closed all you need do is press a cen...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century English Art Deco Barware

    Materials

    Metal

  • Art Deco Stylish Figured Walnut Cocktail Cabinet Dry Bar, English, c1930
    Located in Devon, England
    For your consideration is this fabulously stylish 1930's Art Deco cocktail cabinet. Wonderful and an unusual shape being of a stepped bow form. This cabinet dates from the 1930's and...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century English Art Deco Dry Bars

    Materials

    Chrome

  • Art Deco Burr Walnut Drinks Cocktail Cabinet, Dry Bar, by H & L Epstein, C1930
    By Harry & Lou Epstein Furniture Co
    Located in Devon, England
    This hugely stylish cocktail cabinet cabinet is a fantastic piece of Art Deco furniture, and it's internal features prove to be an incredibly appealing feature. Originating England a...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century English Art Deco Dry Bars

    Materials

    Chrome

  • Art Deco Odeon Shaped Dry Bar Cocktail Cabinet, English, c1930
    Located in Devon, England
    For your consideration is this fabulously stylish 1930's Art Deco cocktail cabinet. This dry bar dates to the 1930's and has all the bells and whistles you want from a cocktail cabin...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century English Art Deco Dry Bars

    Materials

    Chrome

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    Located in Riverdale, NY
    Amazing Art Deco New York dry bar cabinet inlaid with exotic woods with a skyline view of NY from the New Jersey side. Exotic woods in different tones are used to depict the booming skyline as well as a pair of black steamer ships coming into port and a barge centered in the middle of the doors. Floating above are symbols of a party time New York filled with renewed promise, a top hat, cocktail glass, masquerade ball mask...
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    Vintage 1930s North American Art Deco Dry Bars

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    Wood

  • Italian Goatskin Book Shaped Dry Bar Cabinet by Aldo Tura
    By Aldo Tura
    Located in Palm Springs, CA
    A glamorous 1950s Italian goatskin book shaped dry bar cabinet designed by Aldo Tura. The bar is constructed of wood covered with lacquered goatskin with a hand painted Renaissance S...
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    Vintage 1950s Italian Mid-Century Modern Dry Bars

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    Brass

  • Aldo Tura Green Goatskin Bar Cabinet, 1960s
    By Aldo Tura
    Located in Munich, DE
    This magnificent small bar cabinet was illuminated and mirrored inside with two glass shelves, has four drawers with brass drawer knobs and is in ve...
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    Vintage 1960s Italian Hollywood Regency Dry Bars

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    Brass

  • Iconic Art Deco Cocktail Shaker by Adie Brothers, circa 1930s
    By Adie Brothers
    Located in Bath, GB
    A striking silver plated cocktail shaker in a terrific Art Deco shape. Just back from our silversmith's workshop where it has been professionally cleaned and polished, restoring i...
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    Vintage 1930s British Art Deco Barware

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  • Willy Rizzo Midcentury Cubic Chromed Steel, Wood and Glass Dry Bar, Italy 1970s
    By Willy Rizzo
    Located in Roma, IT
    Unique midcentury cubic dry bar in lacquered ash wood, mirrored steel and glass dry bar with hidden wheels. Willy Rizzo probably produced this incredible piece of barware in Italy during the 1970s. The wheeled bar cart's four sides are in mirrored chromed steel, while the top is in dark smoked glass. It moves thanks to four hidden wheels, and the structure is veneered black lacquered oak. A design masterpiece that will become a cult furniture element in a midcentury bar or living room. Italian designer and photographer Willy Rizzo (1928-2013) first came to prominence in the 1960s as both a chronicler of and participant in La Dolce Vita, the glamorous, jet set lifestyle enjoyed by many international celebrities and socialites in the postwar era. While photography was Rizzo's first love, in the 1970s he developed a passion for interiors and launched a second successful career as a luxury furniture designer. Rizzo was born in Naples in 1928 but moved to France early. After expressing an interest in photography at the age of 12, Rizzo's mother gifted him an Agfa Box camera; soon he was shooting portraits of his classmates at Paris's Istituto Statale Italiano Leonardo Da Vinci. In the 1940s, Rizzo began his career as a photojournalist, working for several French publications, including Ciné Mondial, Point de Vue, and Image du Monde. In the aftermath of the Second World War, Rizzo notably covered the Nuremberg Trials and travelled to Tunisia for Point de Vue to photograph the conflict in North Africa, later published in Life Magazine. As his reputation grew, he was hired by France Dimanche to take portraits of the rich and famous at flashy events like the Cannes Film Festival. Rizzo's charm won the trust of royalty, dignitaries, and movie stars, allowing him to capture these public figures in unusually candid moments. Hoping to advance his career further, Rizzo travelled to New York with Black Star Agency in 1947 to photograph American starlets. When he returned to Paris two years later, he was invited to join Jean Prouvost’s newest publication in colour, Paris Match, as head photographer—a position that he held for 20 years and, along the way, sparked a new culture of celebrity photographers who were as intriguing and fashionable as their subjects. In 1959, he became the artistic director of Marie Claire and collaborated with other fashion magazines, such as Vogue. Throughout his career, Rizzo photographed dozens of stars, including Brigitte Bardot, Maria Callas, Salvador Dalí, Marlene Dietrich, Jane Fonda, Gene Kelly, and Gregory Peck, as well as striking up close friendships with famous personalities like Coco Chanel, Christian Dior, and Jack Nicholson. In 1962, Rizzo famously captured some of the last moments of Marilyn Monroe’s life on film before tragically committing suicide a few weeks later. In 1968, Rizzo married Italian actress Elsa Martinelli, and the pair relocated to Rome. It was here that Rizzo began his work in furniture design, starting with his newly-leased, run-down Roman apartment. Just for personal use (at first), Rizzo created a series one-of-a-kind pieces inspired by modernist icons, such as Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier. But as his glitterati friends—Rodolfo Parisi, Gigli Rizzi, Franco Rapetti, Salvador Dalí, Brigitte Bardot, and the like—became admirers of his work, Rizzo was flooded with design commissions. Rizzo went on to furnish apartments for Italian aristocracy in the Palazzo Borghese and Palazzo Ruspoli that same year and quickly earned an international reputation as a designer to the rich and famous. In response to ever-growing demand, he launched his own Tivoli-based company dedicated to contemporary furniture design handmade in lux materials such as wood, marble, stainless steel, brass, and wild boar. Over time, his team of eight grew to 150, and he was able to open shops in France and throughout Europe, as well as in New York, Miami, and Los Angeles. With an emphasis on clean lines and geometric forms, Rizzo's tables, chairs, and accessories combined contemporary shapes with traditional materials—in contrast to many of his contemporaries, like Ettore Sottsass and Vico Magistretti, who were popularizing plastic, foam, and other synthetics in furniture production. Rizzo's most successful designs are many low, box-like tables in granite, metal, glass, or burled wood, often embellished with brass or chrome accents or built-in liquor cabinets or trays. Two examples of his most celebrated designs include the Alveo Coffee Table (1970s) for Mario Sabot and the circular Yin Yang Coffee Table...
    Category

    Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Barware

    Materials

    Steel, Metal, Chrome

  • French Art Deco Bakelite Cocktail Stirrers, 1930s
    By Studio Art Deco
    Located in Saint-Amans-des-Cots, FR
    French Art Deco cocktail stirrers, France, 1930s. Bakelite, chrome and precious woods. 6 stirrers. Width : 24.5cm - 9.65", Height : 13.5cm - 5.3", Depth : 5cm - 2".
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    Vintage 1930s French Art Deco Barware

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