
From Royère to Lalanne: Property from a Private New York Collection
A Rare "Arlecchino" Low Table
Live auction begins on:
June 11, 03:00 PM GMT
Estimate
100,000 - 150,000 USD
Bid
70,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
From Royère to Lalanne: Property from a Private New York Collection
Gio Ponti
A Rare "Arlecchino" Low Table
circa 1956
produced by Giordano Chiesa, Milan, Italy
painted brass, patinated brass, glass
14 ⅞ in. (37.8 cm) high
31 ⅝ in. (80.3 cm) diameter
Private Collection, Milan, commissioned directly from the artist, circa 1956
Thence by descent
Private Collection
Christie's London, October 16, 2019, lot 21
Galerie Alexandre Biaggi, Paris
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2022
Gio Ponti, exh. cat., The Seibu Museum of Art, Tokyo, 1986, pp. 121 (for a related example), 122, 127-128 and 139
Ugo La Pietra, Gio Ponti, New York, 2009, pp. 238-239 (for a related example), 250 and 252
Lisa Licitra Ponti, Gio Ponti: The Complete Work 1923-1978, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1990, p. 194
This lot is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from the Gio Ponti archives.
Gio Ponti’s Arlecchino table belongs to that rare class of twentieth-century furniture that reads with equal force as design object and architectural gesture. Executed in a visual language that is at once exacting and inventive, the table exemplifies Ponti’s conviction that modernism could be both disciplined and delightfully expressive. Its name, evoking the colorful theatrical figure of commedia dell’arte, captures the spirit of the work: poised, animated, and sharply composed.
Ponti was never satisfied with furniture that merely performed a function. Instead, he treated each piece as a structured idea, built from proportion, rhythm, and a careful calibration of line. Arlecchino is characteristic in this respect. Its presence organizes the room, establishing a focal point from which the surrounding space seems to measure itself. The tabletop and base relationships are resolved with Ponti’s signature blend of clarity and charm, resulting in an object that feels both ingeniously engineered and aesthetically buoyant.
In the context of collecting, the Arlecchino table has long been valued for its unmistakable identity. Works by Ponti are frequently sought not only for their sculptural quality, but for their wider significance within twentieth-century design history: the designer’s relentless pursuit of form, his optimistic modernism, and his ability to bring a distinctly Italian sense of style to the essentials of everyday life. Arlecchino crystallizes these themes. It is modern in its thinking and expressive in its execution, maintaining an elegance that feels contemporary even when seen through a mid-century lens.
Moreover, the table’s pictorial qualities encourage a more active mode of viewing. As one moves around it, the composition shifts subtly, revealing different emphases in structure and proportion so that it never settles into a single, static impression. This dynamism is precisely what allows the Arlecchino table to function as more than a supporting piece within an interior: it becomes a defining element, a conversation piece, and a lasting expression of Ponti’s creative range.
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