Skip to Content
Calderwood Gallery is a world class resource for original French Art Deco furniture. Works by Maurice Dufrene, Jacques Adnet, Ruhlmann, Jallot, Follot, Arbus, Leleu, Dominuque, Subes, Sue et Mare. Art Nouveau, decorative arts, iron works.
Inventory
Designers
About Us
Contact
0
0
Calderwood Gallery is a world class resource for original French Art Deco furniture. Works by Maurice Dufrene, Jacques Adnet, Ruhlmann, Jallot, Follot, Arbus, Leleu, Dominuque, Subes, Sue et Mare. Art Nouveau, decorative arts, iron works.
Inventory
Designers
About Us
Contact
0
0
Inventory
Designers
About Us
Contact
Inventory Lucie Renaudot modernist side table (#1116)
1 / 4
Very+modernist+side+table+Renaudot +773.jpg Image 1 of 4
Very+modernist+side+table+Renaudot +773.jpg
Very+modernist+side+table+Renaudot%3F+774.jpg Image 2 of 4
Very+modernist+side+table+Renaudot%3F+774.jpg
Very+modernist+side+table+Renaudot%3F+775.jpg Image 3 of 4
Very+modernist+side+table+Renaudot%3F+775.jpg
Very+modernist+side+table+Renaudot%3F+776.jpg Image 4 of 4
Very+modernist+side+table+Renaudot%3F+776.jpg

Lucie Renaudot modernist side table (#1116)

$8,200.00

French Art Deco Modernist side table by Lucie Renaudot in French walnut. Ca. 1930. 31" long x 24" deep x 24" high (25" at top sides).

LUCIE RENAUDOT (1879-1939)

One of only a handful of female designers in the French Art Deco period, LUCIE RENAUDOT was born Lucie Edith Marie Julie Macqueron on July 17, 1879, in Valenciennes, France. Little is known of her early life or education, although her successful design career speaks for itself. She married the painter Paul Renaudot (b. November 29, 1871 in Rome - d. Paris 1920) on June 30, 1903 in Paris.

Her first design commissions came from the tea rooms Tipperary and Ca Ira, around 1918.

From 1919 to 1939 she designed furniture that was produced by Paul-Alfred Dumas, Parisian designer and manufacturer of textiles and wallpapers. Her work was first exhibited publicly at the Salon d’Automne in 1919 and steadily thereafter. In 1923 she exhibited at the Salon des Artistes Decoratifs. For the Paris Expo in 1925 she designed a child’s bedroom for the Ambassade Francaise, a pavilion organized by the Salon des Artistes Decorateurs. In 1935 Renaudot designed staterooms for the renowned French oceanliner, Normandie. And in 1937 she designed a living room for Maurice Rinck at the 1937 Paris International Exhibition of Art and Technology in Modern Life which won the Grand Prix.

She said, of her own career: "Certainly, the work of the decorative artist is admirably suited to women, and if she is gifted, intelligent and hard-working, she can create a superb position for herself, but she must never shrink from responsibility and work." (Francoise Vitry, "Enquetes, La femme dans l'evolution de l'art apres la guerre", L'Opinion: Journal de la Semaine, November 13, 1926.)

Renaudot died in 1939.

PLEASE NOTE THIS TABLE IS UNRESTORED IN THE PHOTOGRAPHS.

Add to inquiry list

French Art Deco Modernist side table by Lucie Renaudot in French walnut. Ca. 1930. 31" long x 24" deep x 24" high (25" at top sides).

LUCIE RENAUDOT (1879-1939)

One of only a handful of female designers in the French Art Deco period, LUCIE RENAUDOT was born Lucie Edith Marie Julie Macqueron on July 17, 1879, in Valenciennes, France. Little is known of her early life or education, although her successful design career speaks for itself. She married the painter Paul Renaudot (b. November 29, 1871 in Rome - d. Paris 1920) on June 30, 1903 in Paris.

Her first design commissions came from the tea rooms Tipperary and Ca Ira, around 1918.

From 1919 to 1939 she designed furniture that was produced by Paul-Alfred Dumas, Parisian designer and manufacturer of textiles and wallpapers. Her work was first exhibited publicly at the Salon d’Automne in 1919 and steadily thereafter. In 1923 she exhibited at the Salon des Artistes Decoratifs. For the Paris Expo in 1925 she designed a child’s bedroom for the Ambassade Francaise, a pavilion organized by the Salon des Artistes Decorateurs. In 1935 Renaudot designed staterooms for the renowned French oceanliner, Normandie. And in 1937 she designed a living room for Maurice Rinck at the 1937 Paris International Exhibition of Art and Technology in Modern Life which won the Grand Prix.

She said, of her own career: "Certainly, the work of the decorative artist is admirably suited to women, and if she is gifted, intelligent and hard-working, she can create a superb position for herself, but she must never shrink from responsibility and work." (Francoise Vitry, "Enquetes, La femme dans l'evolution de l'art apres la guerre", L'Opinion: Journal de la Semaine, November 13, 1926.)

Renaudot died in 1939.

PLEASE NOTE THIS TABLE IS UNRESTORED IN THE PHOTOGRAPHS.

French Art Deco Modernist side table by Lucie Renaudot in French walnut. Ca. 1930. 31" long x 24" deep x 24" high (25" at top sides).

LUCIE RENAUDOT (1879-1939)

One of only a handful of female designers in the French Art Deco period, LUCIE RENAUDOT was born Lucie Edith Marie Julie Macqueron on July 17, 1879, in Valenciennes, France. Little is known of her early life or education, although her successful design career speaks for itself. She married the painter Paul Renaudot (b. November 29, 1871 in Rome - d. Paris 1920) on June 30, 1903 in Paris.

Her first design commissions came from the tea rooms Tipperary and Ca Ira, around 1918.

From 1919 to 1939 she designed furniture that was produced by Paul-Alfred Dumas, Parisian designer and manufacturer of textiles and wallpapers. Her work was first exhibited publicly at the Salon d’Automne in 1919 and steadily thereafter. In 1923 she exhibited at the Salon des Artistes Decoratifs. For the Paris Expo in 1925 she designed a child’s bedroom for the Ambassade Francaise, a pavilion organized by the Salon des Artistes Decorateurs. In 1935 Renaudot designed staterooms for the renowned French oceanliner, Normandie. And in 1937 she designed a living room for Maurice Rinck at the 1937 Paris International Exhibition of Art and Technology in Modern Life which won the Grand Prix.

She said, of her own career: "Certainly, the work of the decorative artist is admirably suited to women, and if she is gifted, intelligent and hard-working, she can create a superb position for herself, but she must never shrink from responsibility and work." (Francoise Vitry, "Enquetes, La femme dans l'evolution de l'art apres la guerre", L'Opinion: Journal de la Semaine, November 13, 1926.)

Renaudot died in 1939.

PLEASE NOTE THIS TABLE IS UNRESTORED IN THE PHOTOGRAPHS.

Inquiry List
Please provide your contact information and we will get back to you shortly.
Name *

Thank you for your inquiry. We will get back to you shortly!

Calderwood Gallery

Facebook
Instagram


(215) 546-5357

(215) 327-8664

calderwood.gallery@gmail.com

242 Geiger Road

Philadelphia, PA. 19115

Very+modernist+side+table+Renaudot +773.jpg
Very+modernist+side+table+Renaudot%3F+774.jpg
Very+modernist+side+table+Renaudot%3F+775.jpg
Very+modernist+side+table+Renaudot%3F+776.jpg