Tuesday 6 October 2009

Donald Deskey




Donald Deskey
(23 November 189429 April 1989)

American interior and industrial designer. He gained a degree in architecture and studied painting before working in advertising. From 1922 to 1924 he was head of the art department at Juniata College, Huntingdon, PA. In 1921 and 1925 he made trips to Paris, where he attended the Ecole de la Grande Chaumi, returning to New York in 1926 as a champion of modern art and design
In 1926-7 he created the city's first modern window displays for the Franklin Simon and Saks Fifth Avenue department stores. In 1927 he was joined by the designer Philip Vollmer, and the partnership became Deskey-Vollmer, Inc. 
Deskey expanded into designing interiors, furniture, lamps and textiles, becoming a pioneer of the Style moderne (as Art Deco was known in America). His earliest model for the interior of an apartment was shown at the American Designers' Gallery, New York, in 1929. 
With its cork-lined walls, copper ceiling, movable walls, pigskin-covered furniture and linoleum floor, it demonstrated his novel approach. He was one of the first American designers to use Bakelite, Formica, Fabrikoid, brushed aluminium and chromium-plated brass, which he would combine with more exotic materials. . 
In 1931, for the showman Samuel L. Rothafel and the Rockefeller family, he created the interiors of Radio City Music Hall, Rockefeller Center, New York, introducing aluminium foil wallpaper in the men's smoking lounge. His Radio City interiors, together with a luxury apartment he designed for Rothafel in the same building, survive as his masterpieces.

Some Examples of Donald Deskey Art Deco pieces. 




Donald Deskey, Table Lamp, 1927



 
 Radio City Music Hall.


Donald Deskey Designed Brunswick Centennial Pool Table.



 Machine Age End Table in Walnut in the mannner of Donald Deskey.





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