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French Art Nouveau Bamboo Étagère by, Emile Gallé

Rare French Art Nouveau carved wood, inlaid marquetry and pierce carved "Bamboo" étagére by, Emile Gallé with each shelf decorated with various inlaid fruitwood marquetry floral and insects, further decorated with a carved bamboo chute frame. The étagére is signed, "E Gallé" This object exemplifies Emile Gallé's direct influence of japonisme.

circa 1900

Notes:
This model was first exhibited at the Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1900 and is also exhibited at Österreichischen Museums für Angewandte Kunst, Vienna.


height: 43.25 in. x width: 28.75 in. x depth: 13.75 in.
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French Art Nouveau Bamboo Étagère by, Emile Gallé

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Émile Gallé (Nancy, 8 May 1846 – Nancy, 23 September 1904) was a French artist who worked in glass, and is considered to be one of the major forces in the French Art Nouveau movement. Gallé was the son of a faience and furniture manufacturer and studied philosophy, botany, and drawing in his youth. He later learned glassmaking at Meisenthal and came to work at his father's factory in Nancy following the Franco-Prussian War. His early work was executed using clear glass decorated with enamel, but he soon turned to an original style featuring heavy, opaque glass carved or etched with plant motifs, often in two or more colours as cameo glass. His friend and patron Robert de Montesquiou sent him to Bayreuth with a recommendation to Cosima Wagner, which led to a great enthusiasm for Parsifal. His career took off after his work received praise at the Paris Exhibition of 1878. Within a decade of another successful showing at the Paris Exhibition of 1889, Gallé had reached international fame and his style, with its emphasis on naturalism and floral motifs, was at the forefront of the emerging Art Nouveau movement.