£19 million Chair

DiamondGeezer

VIP Member
VIP Member
Joined
Nov 19, 2004
Messages
3,002
Reaction score
166
Location
Bangalore
The armchair, by Irish designer Eileen Gray was only expected to reach around £3 mllion at Christie's in Paris.

But despite the global recession, frenzied bidding between the world's richest furniture collectors pushed the price to more than six times the estimate.

The chair, just 24 inches high, 61 cms was the highlight of a £90 million sale of decorative art, paintings and silver collections of Yves Saint Laurent and the founder of his couture house, Pierre Berge.

It was bought by specialist Paris art gallery Robert and Cheska Vallois.

The unique piece - known as the "dragons' armchair because of the ornate sculptures on its sweeping armrests - was created between 1917 and 1919 by Miss Gray, who moved to London in 1898 to study at the Slade School of Fine Art.

She became renowned for the luxurious finish of her lacquered furniture.

The chair was originally owned by Suzanne Talbot, Eileen Gray's first and most important patron.

Philippe Garner, Christie's international head of 20th Century Decorative Art and Design, said yesterday: "It is a fabulous price. The sale was a homage to the great personalities, designers, collectors and patrons who so marked their era in Paris in the 1920s and 1930s and to the pioneering vision of Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Berge as collectors."

"They were the great tastemakers of their age. The extraordinary price shows that collectors still have a fierce appetite when presented with an opportunity to buy something unique and of the very best quality."

eileen_gray_chair_1350803c.jpg


Small brown armchair sells for £19 million - Telegraph
 
That's ridiculous for a bloody seat.
HH.
 
You have to wonder what planet these people come from.

£19 million for a chair, do you ever think the insurance will ever let someone put a backside on it and to think the number of people that are not allowed to keep the roof over there head.
 
i kind of half understand that they are looking at it as a unique work of art like a sculpture. But in the current economic climate and in a world were people in the third world are dying through poverty to place this value on a piece of furniture is obscene.

thebigman
 
They'll need to sit down on it when the credit card bill comes!!

Seems ridiculous in the current economic climate.

Curly

to be honest its ridiculous in any economic climate.
 
that could be 19 buggati veryrons,

probably pocket change to them
 
Back
Top