Paris - Western European Rugs
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2
Width
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Length
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75
58
44
23
7
1
1
1
1
27
30
75
1
14
9
1
1
6
6
1
6
3
126
125
29
7
6
3,901
3,197
133
76
80
77
60
25
25
25
14
6
6
5
5
Item Ships From: Paris
Contemporary Colorful Rug Inspired by Seoul
s Aesthetic
Located in Geneve, CH
Contemporary colorful rug inspired by Seoul's Aesthetic
Dimensions: W 170, D 240 cm
New-Zealand wool and silk
The South-Korea capital is known for its twenty-five bridges spanni...
Category
2010s New Zealand Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Wool
Abstract Dadaist Contemporary Rug Inspired by Sophie Taeuber Arp
Located in Geneve, CH
Abstract Dadaist contemporary rug inspired by Sophie Taeuber Arp
Artist: Sophie Taeuber Arp
Dimensions: W 170 x D 240 cm
New Zealand wool and silk
...
Category
2010s New Zealand Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Wool
Contemporary Colorful Rug inspired by Shangai
s Aesthetic
Located in Geneve, CH
Contemporary colorful rug inspired by Shangai's Aesthetic
Dimensions: W 240 x D 240 CM
New Zealand wool
Vibration, perspective, energy, Shanghai by Night is an interpretation of...
Category
2010s New Zealand Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Wool
Abstract Dadaist Contemporary Rug Inspired by Sophie Taeuber Arp
Located in Geneve, CH
Abstract Dadaist contemporary rug inspired by Sophie Taeuber Arp.
Artist: Sophie Taeuber Arp
Dimensions: W 170, D 240 cm
New-Zealand wool and silk.
Japanese Abstractions is a collection of nine pieces, all designed around the concept of the imaginary trip to Japan of the Dadaist and feminist artist Sophie Taeuber Arp. Each rug is a combination of geometric shapes and traditional Japanese patterns, a result of the unexpected yet poetic encounter between pure abstraction and cultural influences, between West and East.
Sophie Taeuber-Arp
Biography (1889–1929)
Sophie Henriette Gertrud Taeuber was born on January 19, 1889 in Davos-Platz, Switzerland. From 1904 to 1907 she attended the Stauffacher-Schule and the drawing school at the Industrie- und Gewerbemuseum, or the museum for industry and design, in St. Gallen. In 1910 she began her studies at the Lehr- und Versuchsateliers für angewandte und freie Kunst in Munich, a reformed art school that sought to synthesize the visual and applied arts. After an additional semester at the school of applied arts in Hamburg in 1914, her student days came to an end. She joined the Schweizerischer Werkbund in 1915, the same year that she met Hans Arp. Enthused about her work, he encouraged her to devote herself to it even more fully. The artists’ close collaboration resulted in collages, sculptures and textile designs. Sophie Taeuber took lessons in movement arts from Rudolf von Laban, a founder of modern dance. She appeared as a dancer at the Dada-Soirées at the Cabaret Voltaire and the Galerie-Dada. Later on, she choreographed her own pieces. On May 5, 1916, she took over the textile class at the applied arts school in Zurich. In 1918, she also became a member of the artist’s association Das Neue Leben (New Life). At the same time, she undertook the design of stage backdrops and marionettes for Carlo Gozzi’s rendition of the opera König Hirsch. On October 20, 1922, she married Hans Arp. In 1925, Taeuber-Arp was appointed a member of the Swiss jury at the Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels in Paris. Her works won prizes and were shown in the International Exhibition of Modern Tapestries in Toledo, Ohio, USA. Sophie Taeuber-Arp and Hans Arp became French citizens in 1926. Through her connections with the Horn brothers, she secured contracts to design the interiors for various buildings, including the Aubette in Strasbourg. In turn, she asked Hans Arp and Theo van Doesburg to collaborate with her on this large scale project. Around the same time, she had a studio-home built according to her own plans in Clamart, near Paris. Having left her teaching post in Switzerland in 1929, Sophie Taeuber-Arp settled permanently in France. In collaboration with Marcel-Eugéne Cahen, she also realized the renovation and redesign of the Parisian Galerie Goemans.
Sophie Taeuber-Arp
Biography (1930–1943)
In Paris, Sophie Taeuber-Arp joined the artists’ group Cercle et Carré and participated in their exhibitions. In 1931 she became a member of the association Abstraction-Création. Her artist friends Theodor and Woty Werner hired her to design the interior of their Paris apartment. A year later, in 1932, she left the Schweizerischer Werkbund. Her visit to the Sztuki Museum in Lodz, which was facilitated by Jan Brzekowski, led to a fruitful artistic exchange between the Polish avant-garde association a.r. and the Parisian artist’s group Abstraction-Création. Sophie Taeuber-Arp participated in various group exhibitions, and often showed her work with Artistes Suisses at the Galerie Vavin and at the Kunsthalle Bern with Hans Arp, Kurt Seligmann, Hans Schiess, and many others. She designed the layout for Anatole Jakovskis’ book Hans Erni, Hans Schiess, Kurt Seligmann, S. H. Taeuber-Arp, Gerard Vulliamy in 1935. Theodor and Woty Werner helped her secure the commission to design the interior of the Bauhaus professor Ludwig Hilberseimer’s Berlin apartment. Her work was shown in the exhibition These, Antithese, Synthese at the Kunstmuseum Luzern and in 1936 in Zeitprobleme in der Schweizer Malerei und Plastik, an exhibition of contemporary Swiss painting and sculpture, at the Kunsthaus Zürich. Additionally, she participated in the Konstruktivisten-Ausstellung, an exhibition of constructivist art, at the Kunsthalle Basel. Sophie Taeuber-Arp founded the international artists’ journal plastique with César Domela, A. E. Gallatin and L. K. Morris in 1937. The same year she joined the Swiss artists’ group Allianz. In 1938, she exhibited at the Exposition internationale du Surréalisme in Paris and at the Exposition of Contemporary Sculpture in London...
Category
2010s New Zealand Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Wool
Abstract Dadaist Contemporary Rug Inspired by Sophie Taeuber Arp
Located in Geneve, CH
Abstract Dadaist contemporary rug inspired by Sophie Taeuber Arp
Artist: Sophie Taeuber Arp
Dimensions: W 170, D 240 cm
New-Zealand wool and silk
Japanese Abstractions is a collection of nine pieces, all designed around the concept of the imaginary trip to Japan of the Dadaist and feminist artist Sophie Taeuber Arp. Each rug is a combination of geometric shapes and traditional Japanese patterns, a result of the unexpected yet poetic encounter between pure abstraction and cultural influences, between West and East.
SOPHIE TAEUBER-ARP
Biography (1889–1929)
Sophie Henriette Gertrud Taeuber was born on January 19, 1889 in Davos-Platz, Switzerland. From 1904 to 1907 she attended the Stauffacher-Schule and the drawing school at the Industrie- und Gewerbemuseum, or the museum for industry and design, in St. Gallen. In 1910 she began her studies at the Lehr- und Versuchsateliers für angewandte und freie Kunst in Munich, a reformed art school that sought to synthesize the visual and applied arts. After an additional semester at the school of applied arts in Hamburg in 1914, her student days came to an end. She joined the Schweizerischer Werkbund in 1915, the same year that she met Hans Arp. Enthused about her work, he encouraged her to devote herself to it even more fully. The artists’ close collaboration resulted in collages, sculptures and textile designs. Sophie Taeuber took lessons in movement arts from Rudolf von Laban, a founder of modern dance. She appeared as a dancer at the Dada-Soirées at the Cabaret Voltaire and the Galerie-Dada. Later on, she choreographed her own pieces. On May 5, 1916, she took over the textile class at the applied arts school in Zurich. In 1918, she also became a member of the artist’s association Das Neue Leben (New Life). At the same time, she undertook the design of stage backdrops and marionettes for Carlo Gozzi’s rendition of the opera König Hirsch. On October 20, 1922, she married Hans Arp. In 1925, Taeuber-Arp was appointed a member of the Swiss jury at the Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels in Paris. Her works won prizes and were shown in the International Exhibition of Modern Tapestries in Toledo, Ohio, USA. Sophie Taeuber-Arp and Hans Arp became French citizens in 1926. Through her connections with the Horn brothers, she secured contracts to design the interiors for various buildings, including the Aubette in Strasbourg. In turn, she asked Hans Arp and Theo van Doesburg to collaborate with her on this large-scale project. Around the same time, she had a studio-home built according to her own plans in Clamart, near Paris. Having left her teaching post in Switzerland in 1929, Sophie Taeuber-Arp settled permanently in France. In collaboration with Marcel-Eugéne Cahen, she also realized the renovation and redesign of theParisian Galerie Goemans.
SOPHIE TAEUBER-ARP
Biography (1930–1943)
In Paris, Sophie Taeuber-Arp joined the artists’ group Cercle et Carré and participated in their exhibitions. In 1931 she became a member of the association Abstraction-Création. Her artist friends Theodor and Woty Werner hired her to design the interior of their Paris apartment. A year later, in 1932, she left the Schweizerischer Werkbund. Her visit to the Sztuki Museum in Lodz, which was facilitated by Jan Brzekowski, led to a fruitful artistic exchange between the Polish avant-garde association a.r. and the Parisian artist’s group Abstraction-Création. Sophie Taeuber-Arp participated in various group exhibitions, and often showed her work with Artistes Suisses at the Galerie Vavin and at the Kunsthalle Bern with Hans Arp, Kurt Seligmann, Hans Schiess, and many others. She designed the layout for Anatole Jakovskis’ book Hans Erni, Hans Schiess, Kurt Seligmann, S. H. Taeuber-Arp, Gerard Vulliamy in 1935. Theodor and Woty Werner helped her secure the commission to design the interior of the Bauhaus professor Ludwig Hilberseimer’s Berlin apartment. Her work was shown in the exhibition These, Antithese, Synthese at the Kunstmuseum Luzern and in 1936 in Zeitprobleme in der Schweizer Malerei und Plastik, an exhibition of contemporary Swiss painting and sculpture, at the Kunsthaus Zürich. Additionally, she participated in the Konstruktivisten-Ausstellung, an exhibition of constructivist art, at the Kunsthalle Basel. Sophie Taeuber-Arp founded the international artists’ journal plastique with César Domela, A. E. Gallatin and L. K. Morris in 1937. The same year she joined the Swiss artists’ group Allianz. In 1938, she exhibited at the Exposition internationale du Surréalisme in Paris and at the Exposition of Contemporary Sculpture in London...
Category
2010s New Zealand Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Wool
Playtime Rug by Emma Boomkamp
Located in Geneve, CH
Playtime rug paper scissors by Emma Boomkamp
Materials: W400 x D300 cm
Dimensions: Wool hand knotted or tufted version
Emma Boomkamp’s Playtime rug collection is inspired by the childhood. A nod to the playground, the first place where we experience interplay with others between sharing and competition. Hopscotch,
game board or labyrinth, the patterns are entangled and overlaid on each other with mischief or seriousness.
The rug designs are available in tufted, printed and handwoven fabric. The handwoven rugs are made in
Teotitlán de Valle, Oaxaca, Mexico and the wool that is used is local Mexican...
Category
2010s Mexican Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Wool
$32,920 / item
Wool "Cross" Rug, Anatole Royer
Located in Geneve, CH
Wool "Cross" rug, Anatole Royer
Dimensions: 200 W x 300 L cm
Materials: 100% pure wool hand-tufted
Other color combinations and sizes are available.
Cross is an innovative rug ...
Category
2010s French Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Wool
$7,884 / item
Cross Rug by Anatole Royer
Located in Geneve, CH
Cross rug by Anatole Royer
Dimensions: 140 x 200 cm
Made to order creations can be done: please contact us for any request.
Cross is an innovative rug s...
Category
2010s Indian Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Other
$3,689 / item
Cross Rug by Anatole Royer
Located in Geneve, CH
Cross rug by Anatole Royer
Dimensions: 170 x 240 cm
Made to order creations can be done:
Cross is an innovative rug system with intertwinted graphic li...
Category
2010s French Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Other
$5,384 / item
Cross Rug by Anatole Royer
Located in Geneve, CH
Cross rug by Anatole Royer
Dimensions: 200 x 290 cm
Made to order creations can be done.
Cross is an innovative rug system with intertwinted graphic lines...
Category
2010s French Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Other
$7,632 / item
Contemporary Colorful Rug Inspired by Seoul
s Aesthetic
Located in Geneve, CH
Contemporary colorful rug inspired by Seoul's Aesthetic
Dimensions: W 200 x D 240 CM
New-Zealand wool and silk
The South-Korea capital is known for its twenty-five bridges spann...
Category
2010s New Zealand Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Wool
Abstract Dadaist Contemporary Rug Inspired by Sophie Taeuber Arp
Located in Geneve, CH
Abstract Dadaist contemporary rug inspired by Sophie Taeuber Arp
Artist: Sophie Taeuber Arp
Dimensions: W 170 x D 240 cm
New Zealand wool and silk
Ja...
Category
2010s New Zealand Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Wool
Abstract Dadaist Contemporary Rug Inspired by Sophie Taeuber Arp
Located in Geneve, CH
Abstract Dadaist contemporary rug inspired by Sophie Taeuber Arp
Artist: Sophie Taeuber Arp
Dimensions: W 170 x D 240 CM
New-Zealand wool and silk
Ja...
Category
2010s New Zealand Modern Paris - Western European Rugs
Materials
Wool
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