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Hollywood Regency Italian Gilt Rope
Tassel Ottoman Stool in Leopard Velvet
Located in Saint Louis, MO
Perch yourself up on a pedestal like Babe Paley did in this 1960s Italian Hollywood Regency gilded rope and tassel leopard ottoman stool. Famed interio...
Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Hollywood Regency Ottomans and Poufs
Materials
Upholstery, Velvet, Wood, Giltwood
Pair of John Vesey "Maximilian Lounge Chairs"
By John Vesey
Located in New York, NY
The “Maximilian Lounge Chair” was John Vesey’s finest and most celebrated chair design — it was also his most expensive one to produce, and appeared in a 1959 issue of Vogue. The aluminum frame was wrought rather than cast, solid rather than assembled, and polished to a seamless satiny sheen. An industrial-aluminum screen supports the black-leather upholstery tufted in a pattern that harks back to the 19th century. So too does the chair’s form that’s based on low-slung Latin American planters’ chairs. One that belonged to the ill-fated Emperor Maximilian of Mexico...
Category
Vintage 1950s American Modern Chairs
Materials
Aluminum
$33,000 / set
Antique Pile French Aubusson Rug
Located in New York, NY
Antique Pile Aubusson rug
France, circa 1746-1762
Provenance: William & Babe Paley.
handwoven
Category
Antique Mid-18th Century French Aubusson Western European Rugs
Materials
Wool
$350,000
Rattan: A World of Elegance and Charm
By Rizzoli International Publications
Located in New York, NY
Rattan furnishings evoke the glamour and laid back elegance of exotic beach houses as well as the informal beauty of plant filled garden rooms and sun dappled verandas.
Long fascinated with rattan's versatility, designer Lulu Lytle examines the enduring appeal of this sustainable tropical palm in RATTAN: A WORLD OF ELEGANCE AND CHARM. The first book in decades to examine the history and craftsmanship of rattan furniture, this insightful tome showcases rattan's appeal through archival images of beautiful interiors including Madeleine Castaing's winter garden in Paris, Michael Taylor's own Californian beach house, the Titanic's Café Parisian and the Billy Baldwin designed Mr. Kennedy's beauty salon in New York City. Rattan's many personalities are explored through its inclusion in settings as diverse as Impressionist paintings, flamboyant nightclubs and pared down contemporary drawing rooms.
A reflection of its inherent beauty and longevity, antique rattan furniture from the nineteenth century is highly collectible, as are rattan pieces created by giants of modern design such as Josef Hoffmann for Thonet, Josef Frank for Svenskt Tenn, Jean-Michel Frank for Ecart, Renzo Mongiardino for Bonacina, Arne Jacobsen for Sika, Paul Frankl and Donald Deskey. Rattan pieces have become iconic and highly prized, including Hiroomi Tahara's Wrap Sofa, Franca Helg's Primavera Chair, and the many iterations of the beloved Peacock Chair. RATTAN also highlights some of the many tastemakers who have embraced rattan--from Marella Agnelli, Babe Paley, and Cecil Beaton to leading interior designers including Jeffrey Bilhuber, Veere Grenney, Axel Vervoordt, and Jacques Grange.
About The Author
Lulu Lytle, long smitten with the romance and versatility of rattan, rescued the last remaining workshop in Britain in 2010 in order to establish Soane Britain...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary American Books
Materials
Paper
$65 / item
Related Items
Gilded Wrought Iron Curule or Savonarola Italian Hollywood Regency Vanity Stool
Located in Topeka, KS
Wonderful, gilded wrought iron Italian Hollywood Regency vanity stool with twisted rope and tassels detail in a Curule or Savonarola sty...
Category
Mid-20th Century Italian Hollywood Regency Stools
Materials
Wrought Iron
$1,995
H 22.5 in W 28.25 in D 14.5 in
Italian Gilt Metal Ottoman Vanity Stool Bench with Metal Rope and Tassel
Located in New York, NY
Voguish Italian made gilt metal bench with rope and tassel motif. This example is in very fine, original condition, clean and ready to use.
Perfect decorative accent bench, ottoma...
Category
Mid-20th Century American Hollywood Regency Benches
Materials
Metal
$1,100
H 19 in W 29 in D 16 in
Pretty antique french Aubusson tapestry
By Royal Manufacture of Aubusson
Located in Saint Ouen, FR
Very beautiful antique French Aubusson tapestry featuring a view of a woman showing a bird in the nature in the woods. With nice natural colours in the hues of yellow, green, pink, o...
Category
Antique Late 19th Century French Aubusson Tapestries
Materials
Wool, Silk
Fantastic Worlds of Frank Frazetta. XXL
By TASCHEN
Located in Los Angeles, CA
All Hail the King of Fantasy Art.
Frank Frazetta finally gets the big beautiful book he deserves.
Frank Frazetta has reigned as the undisputed lord of...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Books
Materials
Fabric, Paper
Pair Of Lounge Chairs Designed By John Hutton For Sutherland
By John Hutton
Located in Bradenton, FL
Exquisite Pair of designer armchairs designed by John Hutton (1947-2006) for the Sutherland Collection (Dallas). Art Deco Moderne inspired l...
Category
20th Century American Art Deco Chairs
Materials
Textile, Wood
Great Architecture of the World Hardcover Book
Located in Moreno Valley, CA
Great Architecture of the World.
This book is an illustrated history from Stonehenge to the Twentieth Century.
The book is edited by John Julius Norwich. It was first published in 19...
Category
Late 20th Century American Art Deco Books
Materials
Paper
1950s Italian Hollywood Regency Rope
Tassel Gilt Metal Stool
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
Just in, this 1950s Italian Hollywood Regency Rope & Tassel Gilt Metal Stool with a new upholstered seat in a Green Velvet.
This is an Italian gilded wrought iron stool with a twi...
Category
Vintage 1940s Italian Hollywood Regency Stools
Materials
Metal
Pair of Eames Lounge Chair Metal
LCM
By Herman Miller, Charles and Ray Eames
Located in New York, NY
Iconic pair of Eames for Herman Miller LCM's in later orange and black paint finish. These chairs are structurally sound and sturdy, both have a later, but not new, orange paint surf...
Category
Mid-20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Lounge Chairs
Materials
Metal
Hollywood Regency Italian Gold Gilded Twisted Rope and Tassel Bench or Ottoman
Located in Philadelphia, PA
A gold gilt rope and tassel motif bench from Italy circa 1960's. A versatile and decorative piece to use in any room of the house. Fine vintage quality.
Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Hollywood Regency Benches
Materials
Metal
$1,100
H 22 in W 16 in D 16 in
Wonderful Italian Gold Gilt Iron Rope Tassel Knotted Round Stool Ottoman Bench
Located in Roslyn, NY
A Wonderful Italian Gold Gilt Iron Rope Form With Tassel Feet And Knots Round Foot Stool / Ottoman / Bench With Beautiful Upholstery
24"diameter x 16"h
Category
20th Century Italian Hollywood Regency Ottomans and Poufs
Materials
Iron, Gold Leaf
$1,850
H 16 in Dm 24 in
Nazmiyal Collection Antique French Aubusson Rug. 6 ft 4 in x 8 ft 3 in
Located in New York, NY
Antique French Aubusson Rug, country of origin / rug type: French rug, Circa date: 18th Century. Size: 6 ft 4 in x 8 ft 3 in (1.93 m x 2.51 m)
Category
Antique 18th Century French Aubusson Western European Rugs
Materials
Wool
Pair of Chrome and Leather Lounge Chairs
Located in Atlanta, GA
Pair of Chrome and Leather Lounge Chairs, Italy, circa 1990s. They have a wide stance and a clean lined design. The leather appears black from certain angles, but is actually a very ...
Category
1990s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chairs
Materials
Metal, Chrome
Previously Available Items
The Original Bill Paley 1996 by Kate Paley, Rare 1st Ed Private Printing
Located in valatie, NY
The Original Bill Paley 1996 by Kate Paley. 1st Ed hardcover with pictorial inset to the front cover, no dust jacket as issued. In the famous S...
Category
1990s American Books
Materials
Paper
H 6.25 in W 6.25 in D 0.75 in
Maquette / Model of Drawing Room for Heinz Family by Maison Jansen
By Maison Jansen
Located in Manhasset, NY
Maison Jansen Macquette, circa mid-1960s
Client: socialite and philanthropist Drue (Dorothy Mary English) Heinz (1915-2018)
Artist: Roger E. Bengue (c. 1913-1997), for Jansen, Inc....
Category
Vintage 1960s French Belle Époque Models and Miniatures
Materials
Paper
Darinka Novitovic Signed Abstract Collage, Paint, Pastel
Graphite Framed 1980
Located in Keego Harbor, MI
A large abstract mixed-media artwork by New York City artist Darinka Novitovic. Signed and dated 1980 on verso. Collage, paint, pastel & graphite on cardboard. Abstracted forms in co...
Category
Vintage 1980s American Paintings
Materials
Paint
H 60.5 in W 54 in D 2 in
George Jones Majolica
Bamboo and Wicker
Plate, English, circa 1870
By George Jones
Located in Banner Elk, NC
George Jones Majolica 'Bamboo and Wicker' Plate, English, circa 1870, shape number 3225. Provenance: From the Estate of Mrs. John Hay Whitney, Sotheby's New York, April 22-25, 1999, Sale number 7293, Lot number 956 (color illustration p. 369).
For over 28 years we have been among the Nation’s preeminent specialists in fine antique majolica.
Betsey Cushing Roosevelt Whitney (1908-1999), the widow of John Hay "Jock" Whitney and the first wife of James Roosevelt II, the eldest son of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was one of the three glamorous Cushing sisters of Boston. Married at twenty-two, she was FDR's clear favorite during the White House years, where she often stood in as a highly competent, enthusiastic and poised hostess, a job which the First Lady deplored. Betsey’s social-climbing mother preened her three daughters from birth to make socially and financially advantageous marriages. And that they did. Her elder sister, Mary (Minnie), married Vincent Astor, and her younger sister, Barbara, whom they called 'Babe' form a young age, married Standard Oil heir, Stanley Mortimer, Jr., and after divorcing him, married William S. Paley, founder of the CBS television network (Babe Paley). These glittering doyennes of New York and international society defined taste, what was in and what wasn't, for thirty years.
After divorcing James Roosevelt in 1940, Betsey married Jock Whitney on March 1, 1942 in an informal family-only ceremony held at her mother’s New York apartment on East 86th Street. She was 33 and he was 37. She had two young daughters, Sara and Kate; he had no children from his previous marriage. As one of the wealthiest men in the world throughout the 1950's, 60's and 70's, Jock achieved his great fortune through equal parts inheritance, business acumen and flat-out good luck. His concerns were as vast and varied as they are interesting; for example, in 1933 he acquired a 15% interest in Technicolor Corporation, and in 1942 when David O. Selznick liquidated his company for tax reasons, and sold his share in GONE WITH THE WIND to his business partner, Jock Whitney, for $500,000, who in turn sold it on to MGM for $2.8 million, so that the studio owned the film outright. In 1946, he founded J.H. Whitney & Company, the oldest venture capital firm in the U.S.
In 1949, after eight years of marriage, he adopted Betsey’s two daughters from her previous marriage to James Roosevelt and the girls’ names were changed to Whitney.
Jock was appointed by Dwight D. Eisenhower as Ambassador to Great Britain and the couple moved to London in 1957 for four years, taking with them some 150 of their favorite paintings, all of them masterpieces. Since their marriage in 1942, the couple had set about collecting scores of nearly priceless paintings and other significant works decorative art, the finest antique furniture, tapestries, porcelains, ceramics, and majolica. During their tenure in London, both Ambassador and Mrs. Whitney became close to Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, who, in a departure from the usual procedure, addressed them by their first names.
After Betsey Whitney’s death in 1999, their collections were consigned to Sotheby’s New York. Items were removed directly from their many homes--a quadruplex at Beekman Place...
Category
Antique 1870s English Victorian Ceramics
Materials
Majolica
George Jones Majolica
Bamboo and Wicker
Plate, English, circa 1870
By George Jones
Located in Banner Elk, NC
George Jones Majolica 'Bamboo and Wicker' Plate, English, circa 1870, shape number 3225. Provenance: From the Estate of Mrs. John Hay Whitney, Sotheby's New York, April 22-25, 1999, Sale number 7293, Lot number 956 (color illustration p. 369).
For over 28 years we have been among the Nation’s preeminent specialists in fine antique majolica.
Betsey Cushing Roosevelt Whitney (1908-1999), the widow of John Hay "Jock" Whitney and the first wife of James Roosevelt II, the eldest son of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was one of the three glamorous Cushing sisters of Boston. Married at twenty-two, she was FDR's clear favorite during the White House years, where she often stood in as a highly competent, enthusiastic and poised hostess, a job which the First Lady deplored. Betsey’s social-climbing mother preened her three daughters from birth to make socially and financially advantageous marriages. And that they did. Her elder sister, Mary (Minnie), married Vincent Astor, and her younger sister, Barbara, whom they called 'Babe' form a young age, married Standard Oil heir, Stanley Mortimer, Jr., and after divorcing him, married William S. Paley, founder of the CBS television network (Babe Paley). These glittering doyennes of New York and international society defined taste, what was in and what wasn't, for thirty years.
After divorcing James Roosevelt in 1940, Betsey married Jock Whitney on March 1, 1942 in an informal family-only ceremony held at her mother’s New York apartment on East 86th Street. She was 33 and he was 37. She had two young daughters, Sara and Kate; he had no children from his previous marriage. As one of the wealthiest men in the world throughout the 1950's, 60's and 70's, Jock achieved his great fortune through equal parts inheritance, business acumen and flat-out good luck. His concerns were as vast and varied as they are interesting; for example, in 1933 he acquired a 15% interest in Technicolor Corporation, and in 1942 when David O. Selznick liquidated his company for tax reasons, and sold his share in GONE WITH THE WIND to his business partner, Jock Whitney, for $500,000, who in turn sold it on to MGM for $2.8 million, so that the studio owned the film outright. In 1946, he founded J.H. Whitney & Company, the oldest venture capital firm in the U.S.
In 1949, after eight years of marriage, he adopted Betsey’s two daughters from her previous marriage to James Roosevelt and the girls’ names were changed to Whitney.
Jock was appointed by Dwight D. Eisenhower as Ambassador to Great Britain and the couple moved to London in 1957 for four years, taking with them some 150 of their favorite paintings, all of them masterpieces. Since their marriage in 1942, the couple had set about collecting scores of nearly priceless paintings and other significant works decorative art, the finest antique furniture, tapestries, porcelains, ceramics, and majolica. During their tenure in London, both Ambassador and Mrs. Whitney became close to Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, who, in a departure from the usual procedure, addressed them by their first names.
After Betsey Whitney’s death in 1999, their collections were consigned to Sotheby’s New York. Items were removed directly from their many homes--a quadruplex at Beekman Place...
Category
Antique 1870s English Victorian Ceramics
Materials
Majolica
Victoria Pottery
VPC
Majolica Plate English, circa 1875
By Victoria Pottery Company
Located in Banner Elk, NC
Victoria Pottery (VPC) Majolica plate 8.75-ins, English, circa 1875, with simulated bamboo edging, colorful bamboo shoots, on a vivid turquoise basket-weave ground. VPC painted pattern mark 'M110' to reverse.
Provenance: From the Estate of Mrs. John Hay Whitney, Sotheby's New York, April 22-25, 1999, Sale number 7293, Lot number 956 (color illustration p. 369).
For over 28 years we have been among the Nation’s preeminent specialists in fine antique majolica.
Betsey Cushing Roosevelt Whitney (1908-1999), the widow of John Hay "Jock" Whitney and the first wife of James Roosevelt II, the eldest son of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was one of the three glamorous Cushing sisters of Boston. Married at twenty-two, she was FDR's clear favorite during the White House years, where she often stood in as a highly competent, enthusiastic and poised Hostess, a job which the first lady deplored. Betsey’s social-climbing mother preened her three daughters from birth to make socially and financially advantageous marriages. And that they did. Her elder sister, Mary (Minnie), married Vincent Astor, and her younger sister, Barbara, whom they called 'Babe' form a young age, married Standard Oil heir, Stanley Mortimer, Jr., and after divorcing him, married William S. Paley, founder of the CBS television network (Babe Paley). These glittering doyennes of New York and international society defined taste, what was in and what wasn't, for thirty years.
After divorcing James Roosevelt in 1940, Betsey married Jock Whitney on March 1, 1942 in an informal family-only ceremony held at her mother’s New York apartment on East 86th Street. She was 33 and he was 37. She had two young daughters, Sara and Kate; he had no children from his previous marriage. As one of the wealthiest men in the world throughout the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, Jock achieved his great fortune through equal parts inheritance, business acumen and flat-out good luck. His concerns were as vast and varied as they are interesting; for example, in 1933 he acquired a 15% interest in Technicolor Corporation, and in 1942 when David O. Selznick liquidated his company for tax reasons, and sold his share in gone with the wind to his business partner, Jock Whitney, for $500,000, who in turn sold it on to MGM for $2.8 million, so that the studio owned the film outright. In 1946, he founded J.H. Whitney & Company, the oldest venture capital firm in the U.S.
In 1949, after eight years of marriage, he adopted Betsey’s two daughters from her previous marriage to James Roosevelt and the girls’ names were changed to Whitney.
Jock was appointed by Dwight D. Eisenhower as Ambassador to Great Britain and the couple moved to London in 1957 for four years, taking with them some 150 of their favorite paintings, all of them masterpieces. Since their marriage in 1942, the couple had set about collecting scores of nearly priceless paintings and other significant works decorative art, the finest antique furniture, tapestries, porcelains, ceramics, and Majolica. During their tenure in London, both Ambassador and Mrs. Whitney became close to Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, who, in a departure from the usual procedure, addressed them by their first names.
After Betsey Whitney’s death in 1999, their collections were consigned to Sotheby’s New York. Items were removed directly from their many homes, a quadruplex at Beekman...
Category
Antique 1870s English Victorian Ceramics
Materials
Majolica







