Skip to content

Gabriel Argy-Rousseau "Arbres" Pâte de verre Table Lamp

Argy Rousseau’s “Arbres” table lamp presents a nocturnal vision of a topiary tree. Rousseau’s stylization of trees was primarily based on Islamic Art, from the cypress trees of the Topkapi palace to the verdant backgrounds of Mughal miniatures. Opposed to the perspectival depiction of trees in European medieval tapestries, Islamic depictions of trees isolated each leaf and flattened foliage into a symmetrical pattern.

Add to Wishlist

Please call +1 (212) 644-6400 or email us at email@macklowegallery.com for pricing information.

  • Product Details
  • Curator's Notes

Item #: EL-20786
Artist: Gabriel Argy-Rousseau
Country: France
Circa: 1926
Dimensions: 14.37" height, 6.5" diameter
Materials: Pâte de verre, translucent glass, Wrought Iron
Signed: G. Argy Rousseau" and "FRANCE
Exhibition History: Collection: An identical example is in the permanent collection of the Kitizawa Museum, Japan
Literature: Bloch-Dermant, G. Argy-Rousseau, Paris 1990, S. 210, Nr. 26.15.

Gabriel Rousseau adopted the suffix 'Argy' in honor of his wife Marianne Argyriadès. She was his best friend's sister. They all shared a love of Greco-Roman and Egyptian antiquity. Argy-Rousseau was interested in many things, studied at the École de Sèvres, but also completed an engineering degree. Throughout his life, he conducted research in areas as diverse as dental porcelain and color photography. In his private life he always surrounded himself with creative personalities, including Henri Cros, who had long been known for his glass works using the 'pâte-de-verre' technique. Argy-Rousseau began to work successfully with the material even before the First World War, after the war he founded a glass factory that had 20 employees at its peak. He developed his own technique for producing his ideas: Argy-Rousseau first modeled his sketched idea in plaster, which was then covered with wax. A refractory hollow mold consisting of several parts was then molded from this model in several work steps. He even produced his own glass. It was crushed into powder and colored by the addition of metal oxides. With the help of fine brushes, the now liquid glass mass, which had been washed several times, was applied precisely to the walls of the refractory mould. Two more layers followed, one after the other, to create strength and at the same time prevent air bubbles from forming. The last layer was resin to further fix the pate de verre. The model was then placed upside down in a wood-fired oven, where the piece was then fired at high temperatures. After cooling, the mold was removed, the now solid object cleaned with acid and the last bumps polished off with a wheel. This is how these wonderful, transparent, at the same time colorful, delicate-looking objects came into being.
X