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EXHIBITIONS | made in France

DEMISCH DANANT INAUGURATES ITS NEW GALLERY IN SEPTEMBER 2016 WITH MADE IN FRANCE

September 17 – November 11, 2016
30 W 12th St New York

Demisch Danant's new gallery in New York City opens to the public on September 17, 2016, with the inaugural exhibition made in France. The show presents a selection of more than two dozen rare and important objects that together trace the parallel and often intertwined narratives of French design of the 1960s and 1970s. The exhibition is intended to shed light on an extraordinary period in which the inventiveness of designers in post-war France shaped taste in the 20th century — and continue to do so today. made in France also offers insights into the ways in which the gallery’s longtime intensive research, scholarship, and discoveries have catalyzed connoisseurship and expanded understanding and appreciation for modern design among private and institutional collectors.

The new home of Demisch Danant, located at 30 West 12th Street in the heart of the Greenwich Village Historic District, has been designed by Rafael de Cárdenas, founder and principal of the firm Architecture at Large, New York, and recently named Maison & Objet Designer of the Year.

Filling the new Demisch Danant space at 30 West 12th Street, the inaugural exhibition made in France traces new narratives in design history by showcasing quintessential works alongside more recent discoveries. Among works on view are important historical pieces by Étienne Fermigier and pathbreaking French lighting firm Verre Lumiere, as well as lesser-known objects by such well-established figures as Maria Pergay, Joseph-André Motte, and Pierre Paulin. made in France also spotlights exceptional works by artists Sheila Hicks and César, whose innovative, multi-disciplinary mergers of sculpture and design are increasingly prominent in the Demisch Danant program.  

made in France is accompanied by an extensively illustrated catalog featuring texts in which Suzanne Demisch and Stephane Danant offer personal recollections and insights into the specific contributions of the designers whose work they advocate and exhibit. 

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