The Modern Exchange Sideboards
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Étienne Kohlmann Brutalist Sideboard
By Etienne Kohlmann
Located in Hudson, NY
A brutalist period sideboard by Étienne Kohlmann, circa 1940. Full of character, made of solid oak, and finished in a mahogany stain.
Étienne Kohlmann (1903-1988) was a French decor...
Category
Mid-20th Century French Brutalist Sideboards
Materials
Oak
Charles Dudouyt Blonde Oak Sideboard
By Charles Dudouyt
Located in Hudson, NY
Statement brutalist sideboard in blonde oak by innovative French designer Charles Dudouyt.
Category
Mid-20th Century French Brutalist Sideboards
Materials
Oak
Audoux Minet Split Reed Sideboard
By Adrien Audoux and Frida Minnet
Located in Hudson, NY
A spectacular piece by Andoux & Minet. Bamboo, split reed and wrought iron. Beautiful construction and a classic shape.
Category
Mid-20th Century French Modern Sideboards
Materials
Iron
French Tambour Door Sideboard
Located in Hudson, NY
A simple sideboard from France. Singular Tambour style accordion door makes opening and closing easy and versatile. Great deep, wide shelves for interior storage. Outside, clean line...
Category
Vintage 1950s French Mid-Century Modern Sideboards
Materials
Wood
Italian Franco Albini for Poggi Sideboard
By Franco Albini, Poggi
Located in Hudson, NY
An Italian model MB 51 sideboard designed by Franco Albini for Poggi. Made of solid teak with a minimalist design and sharp lines.
Category
Mid-20th Century Italian Mid-Century Modern Sideboards
Materials
Teak
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Modular bookstore composed by upholds, containers with flying and doors, shelve. The industrial standard for every product component allows permanent and different solutions, from the bearing structures to the elements. The structure does not need anchorages to the wall and can be placed in the middle of the space.
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Franco Albini was born in Robbiate in 1905, and after his childhood and part of his youth, he moved to Milan.
He graduated at Politecnico of Milan, Faculty of Architecture, in 1929, and He collaborated for three years in Giò Ponti and Emilio Lancia’s office. He probably had his international contacts here, at The International Exposition of 1929 in Barcelona and Paris, where he visited le Corbusier’s office, as Franca Helg used to tell.
Throughout these first three years, his works were undoubtedly related to XIXth Century. His meeting with Edoardo Persico marks an evident turnover towards rationalism and writers for “Casabella” magazine. Persico’s thoughtful and ironical comments on some of Albini’s drawings for office furniture caused him deep upsetting. “I spent days of real anxiety – tells Albini – I had to answer all questions. I had a long fever”.
The new phase that the meeting provoked begins with opening his own first office at Via Panizza with Renato Camus and Giancarlo Palanti. The group of Architects starts taking care of social housing, participating in the competition for the Baracca neighborhood in 1932, and then realizing the Ifacp neighborhood: Fabio Filzi (1936/38), Gabriele D’Annunzio, and Ettore Ponti (1939).
During those years, He also worked for his first private villa (Pestarini).
It is mainly in the context of exhibitions that the Italian architect experiments the compromise between rigor and poetic fantasy that Pagano was talking about; He conceived all the elements that would become recurrent in all types of his work – Architecture, Interiors, Design. The 1933 opening of the new Triennale of Milano, in Palazzo dell’Arte, becomes an occasion to express the highly innovative character of rationalist thinking. In this place, to experiment with new materials and solutions, but most of all a “method”.
Young rationalist architects cultivated the art of exhibiting as a communication lab, an open field to space solutions.
Albini, with Giancarlo Palanti, sets the steel structure house (with R. Camus, G. Mazzoleni, G. Minoletti and coordination by G. Pagano) designing also its furniture. For the next Triennale in 1936, marked by Persico’s early death, Franco Albini, together with a group of young architects around Pagano, takes care of the exhibition of Dwelling, where he presented 3 types of lodgings.
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French 1940s Brutalist Oak Sideboard
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Sideboard
Oak
Brutalist
Sliding doors
France 1940s
Category
Early 20th Century French Brutalist Sideboards
Materials
Oak






