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Art Deco Rosewood Side Table with Drawers, circa 1930s

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Art Deco American Streamline Glass Top Side Table, circa 1930
Located in Bernville, PA
Streamline glass top American Art Deco side table. Beautifully restored in a rich mahogany finish with a frosted edge glass top. An excellent example of American Art Deco with its so...
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Vintage 1930s American Art Deco Side Tables

Materials

Glass, Maple

French Poplar Side Table Sellette or Nightstand Art Deco, circa 1930
Located in Labrit, Landes
Side, end table, selette or nightstand. The size of this little table with a drawer allows to use it for different functions. Made circa 1930, with the art déco characteristics: sty...
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Vintage 1930s French Art Deco Side Tables

Materials

Poplar

Pair of 1930s Art Deco White Lacquer and Blue Mirror Side Tables
Located in Chicago, IL
Uncommon pair of American Art Deco end tables finished in white gloss lacquer with blue tinted mirrored tops. Sinuous top and lower tier supported b...
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Vintage 1930s American End Tables

Materials

Mirror, Wood

Jacques Adnet 1930s Side Table with Glass Shelf
By Jacques Adnet
Located in New York, NY
Jacques Adnet (1901-1984). Side table in satinwood with original clear glass shelf, gilt bronze mounts. France, 1930s. Dimensions: 30 x 16 x 25 H.
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Vintage 1930s French Mid-Century Modern Side Tables

Materials

Bronze

Art Deco Side Table
Located in New York, NY
American Art Deco Inspired side table for Harry Baron Furniture. Mahogany wood table, black lacquered top, reverse tapered legs, turned wood struts joined...
Category

Vintage 1940s American Art Deco End Tables

Materials

Mahogany

Art Deco Side Table
$1,100 Sale Price
31% Off
Circa 1930 German Side Table
By Fritz August Breuhaus de Groot 1
Located in New York, NY
Our table was made of birch, solid and veneered, stained a rich brown, and topped off with a slab of Bohemian breccia marble. We date it to around 1928, and attribute the design to Fritz August Breuhaus de Groot, who coined the term Kultivierte Sachlichkeit (Cultured Objectivity) to describe his work, and distinguish it from the Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity) practiced by his contemporaries Walter Gropius, Mies van der Rohe, and Lily Reich. The table bears a passing resemblance to a considerably simplified, marble-topped ovoid one that he designed for his 1934 Berlin living room. Breuhaus was a man on the make. The first of his three marriages was to the daughter of an industrialist, who financed the building of luxury villas and workers’ housing designed by his son-in-law. In 1929, Breuhaus, the son of a dentist, added “de Groot” to his name, falsely linking himself to a distinguished family of painters. By then, he’d been fudging his academic record for years. That didn’t prevent a teaching appointment at the State University of Bavaria, which allowed him to add the prestigious “Herr Professor” prefix to his name. Yet he never followed through on the teaching — he was far too busy designing more luxury villas (commissions he accepted only if he could furnish them as well), and products for his own company, which included furniture, textiles, wallpapers, lighting, and fine silver. In addition to designing aircraft interiors for Lufthansa, and pullman railroad...
Category

Vintage 1920s German Modern Side Tables

Materials

Marble

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