Attributed Maurice Dufrène for La Maison Moderne | 2 Gilt-bronze Art Nouveau Wall Lights | France c.1905 | SOLD
Product Code: LG727VAS012A pair important gilt-bronze wall lights of organic art nouveau form almost certainly designed and executed by Maurice Dufrène but apprently unsigned and probably sold at la Maison Moderne, Paris. Both wall lights maintain their original gilding but the patina of each bracket is ever so slightly different to each other. The orignal, delicate and exquistly blown French lily lampshades are of a light blue opalecence to the body with strong pink/cranberry shading to the tips. France c.1905
Provenance:
- See a photo of twin-arm version of wall lights displayed by Dufrene supposedly at the Salon 1903 of La Société des Artistes Français, although we believe it is possible the picture to be from the The Salon d’Automne or La Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts of the same year which Dufrene is known to have exibited at.
Dimensions:
- Ht.(backplate)24cm/9.5in, W.10/4, Dpth.44/17.5, W.(shade)19/7.5
Maurice Dufrêne
- Maurice Dufrêne was born in Paris in 1876. From an early age he showed an affinity for furniture, gathering scraps from his father’s workshop to use in designs of his own.
- Dufrêne showed his own work for first time in 1902, and from 1903 on exhibited regularly at the Salon d’Automne and the Salons of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts.
- He couldn’t ignore this interest for long, and abandoned his study of painting at the École des Arts Decoratifs to work for Julius Meier-Grafe at La Maison Moderne, a gallery that employed a staff of artists.
- In 1904 he helped to found the Société des Artistes Décorateurs, which quickly became one of France’s most prominent organizations of contemporary designers, hosting a popular annual salon of its own. He would exhibit there for the next thirty years.














