CLAUDE LALANNE (1925-2019)
CLAUDE LALANNE (1925-2019)
CLAUDE LALANNE (1925-2019)
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CLAUDE LALANNE (1925-2019)
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Property from a Distinguished Private Collection
CLAUDE LALANNE (1925-2019)

'Crocodile' Settee, 2013

Details
CLAUDE LALANNE (1925-2019)
'Crocodile' Settee, 2013
gilt bronze, patinated copper, leather and suede upholstery
32 5/8 x 48 3/4 x 25 3/16 in. (83 x 124 x 64 cm)
monogrammed CL, stamped LALANNE, dated 2013 and numbered 3/8
Provenance
Galerie Mitterrand, Paris, acquired directly from the artist
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2014
Literature
J. Russell, Les Lalanne, Paris, 1975, pp. 70-71 (for an armchair version of this model)
Les Lalannes: Claude and François-Xavier Lalanne, Marisa del Re Gallery, New York, 1988, n.p. (for a related example)
R. Rosenblum, Les Lalanne, Geneva, 1991, pp. 79, 104, 128 (for an armchair version of this model)
D. Marchesseau, Les Lalanne, Paris, 1998, pp. 56, 77 (for an armchair version of this model)
W. Peterson, ed., François-Xavier & Claude Lalanne: Dreams for the Light of Day, exh. cat., Gerald Peters Gallery, Santa Fe, 2000, p. 66 (for an armchair version of this model)
Claude & François-Xavier Lalanne: Fragments, exh. cat., Galerie Enrico Navarra, Paris and JGM Galerie, Paris, 2000, pp. 39, 127 (for an armchair version of this model)
Claude & François-Xavier Lalanne, exh. cat., Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York and Ben Brown Fine Arts, London, 2006, p. 99 (for an armchair version of this model)
D. Abadie, Lalanne(s), Paris, 2008, pp. 170-171, 311, 342 (for an armchair version of this model)
Les Lalanne, exh. cat., Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris, 2010, pp. 88 and 90, 92-93 (for an armchair version of this model)
A. Dannatt, ed., Les Lalanne: Fifty Years of Work 1964-2015, exh. cat., Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York, 2015, pp. 72-73, 103 and 184, 188, 191, 193, 195, 198-201 (for an armchair version of this model)
A. Dannatt, François-Xavier & Claude Lalanne: In the Domain of Dreams, New York, 2018, pp. 233 and 41, 157, 237, 244, 250-251, 258 (for an armchair version of this model)
F.-M. Banier and J.-G. Mitterrand, Claude Lalanne, vol. 2, Montreuil, 2018, p. 17 (for an armchair version of this model)
K. Morris, Claude & François-Xavier Lalanne: Nature Transformed, exh. cat. The Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts, 2021, pp. 4, 84-85, 116, 120 (for an armchair version of this model)
Les Lalanne à Trianon, exh. cat., Château de Versailles, Paris, 2021, pp. 33 and 35, 39, 124 (for an armchair version of this model)

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Lot Essay

The crocodile motif is a common theme in Claude Lalanne's body of work. It presents itself repeatedly throughout her years as a designer in the form of chaises, banquettes, and settees. First seen in 1972, Claude's crocodile designs were made possible thanks to the director of a zoo in Paris that gifted her a specimen after it died of natural causes. The director was first introduced to Claude by friend and fellow artist Niki de Saint Phalle (1930-2002). One of the design's highlights is the copper animals' lifelike quality. The delicate and detailed nature of Claude's pieces is due to an electroplating technique that transforms molds and organic material, often plants and animals found near her home in Ury, France, into galvanized copper. During this process, flora and fauna are submerged in a copper sulphate bath and fused with a thin metal layer. The resulting texture and detail project an air of realism not readily found in metalwork. Similar examples were displayed in the Palace of Versailles in 2021 as part of a retrospective of the artist's works curated by Galerie Mitterrand. Situated within the palace architecture surrounded by gilded reliefs of animals, opulent wall coverings, and grand French windows looking out onto the Trianon gardens, the crocodile concept looked as though it had always been there. However, they also appeared well suited when placed among the modest furnishings of Claude's own home or amongst the contemporary decor of her clients' living rooms—a testament to the timeless themes of her designs.

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