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Lot 39: Custom coffee table

Est: $4,000 USD - $6,000 USDSold:
Los Angeles Modern Auctions (LAMA)Van Nuys, CA, USMay 19, 2013

Item Overview

Description

Studio.

Dimensions

15.5" x 48" diameter

Artist or Maker

Medium

Oak

Date

Custom designed and executed for the Kingsley residence c. 1946

Provenance

Provenance: The Kingsley residence, Pacific Palisades, California;
Thence by descent

Notes


Architect and designer J. R. Davidson (1889-1977) was instrumental in transforming the Los Angeles landscape through his mid-century houses that employed expansive yet sensible floor plans. A German émigré who traveled throughout Europe before arriving in Los Angeles, Davidson received little formal education in architecture. The rest of his knowledge was experiential, gained from apprenticeships in Berlin, London, and Paris. After many successful years in Berlin designing lighting and interiors, Davidson and his wife Greta moved to Los Angeles in 1924, just like his friends and future collaborators Richard Neutra and K.E.M. Weber. In addition to designing interiors, he ushered in a modern sensibility through commissions for building facades, as well as hotel and home remodels. As Davidson’s reputation for practical storage solutions and innovative designs grew, he earned commissions to design Los Angeles-area residences. In 1945, John Entenza, editor of Arts & Architecture asked Davidson to design the first Case Study House; he also designed Case Study Houses #11 (1946) and #15 (1947).

While the plans for Case Study House #1 were being finalized, Davidson designed two houses on adjoining lots in the Pacific Palisades. The Kingsley family purchased land on an old lemon grove – with many of the trees intact – that sloped downward facing the ocean. The "houses without halls" incorporated wide-open rooms encased by thin walls and large sliding glass doors that opened onto raised terraces. Much of Davidson’s custom-designed furniture adorned the interior of the Kingsley houses, including a dining suite, coffee table, and wall light. Davidson realized a distinctly California modern space he described as having masculine exteriors and feminine interiors. Architectural historian Esther McCoy agreed, extending his analysis, "But also feminine was the proximity into which he brought people, the tight warm areas with cool intervals between." The Kingsleys were so enamored with the final realization of the project that they recalled Davidson to their home between 1958 and 1962 in order to make structural changes and updates to the interior.

McCoy, Esther. The Second Generation. Salt Lake City: Gibbs M. Smith, Inc, 1984. Print. Together with one original photograph by Julius Shulman of the interior where the table is located in situ and a copy of the Los Angeles Times Home Magazine, March 28, 1948, featuring an article on the house

Auction Details

Modern Art & Design Auction

by
Los Angeles Modern Auctions (LAMA)
May 19, 2013, 12:00 PM PST

16145 Hart St., Van Nuys, CA, 91406, US