New Introducing 5 daily podcasts: Closing Price, Open Bid, Luxury Spending, Art Market & Auto Market — Listen now
Design
3 min read

A major Art Deco collection at the heart of the Design sale

Published on
April 23, 2026
A major Art Deco collection at the heart of the Design sale
Contributors
Sharon Obuobi
Editor in Chief
Akosua Kissiedu
Business Intelligence Editor
Hai Ngan Bui
Business Intelligence Writer
GET
WEEKLY HIGHLIGHTS ON
Design
Read about our privacy policy.
Thank you! You're now subscribed for our weekly newsletter.
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Paris, 23 April 2026 - Christie's Paris presents its Spring Design Sale, which this season stands out as one of the highlights of the international market for 20th- and 21st-century decorative arts. Driven by particularly strong momentum, with €14.5M in spring 2025 followed in November by a sale that doubled its estimate on the occasion of the centenary of Art Deco, paying tribute to a century of creation since its emergence, the category confirms Paris's growing appeal as a venue for major events in historic design. Bringing together approximately 260 lots, the sale will exceptionally take place over two days, on 26 and 27 May.

In the wake of the major exhibition devoted to Art Deco at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, the sale will open with a remarkable ensemble of approximately fifty works from the collection of Hélène and Gérard Doux. Assembled over time through Parisian galleries and auction rooms, this coherent and exacting collection unfolds, within the setting of a Parisian apartment, a particularly sensitive vision of the elegance and modernity of the interwar period.

Ruhlmann and the masters of Art Deco

Several major works by Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann rank among the most highly anticipated pieces, including an important Vautheret chandelier, estimated at €300,000 to €500,000. The ensemble also features rare folding screens by Jean Dunand (€40,000 to €60,000), a carpet by Armand-Albert Rateau circa 1926 (€100,000 to €150,000), as well as a dining table by Ruhlmann dated 1933 (€100,000 to €150,000), bearing witness to a particularly exacting eye devoted to the decorative elegance of the interwar period.

Modernism and historic provenance

The sale will also offer a significant overview of 20th-century art, ranging from modernist experiments to post-war sculptural forms, bringing together a number of works with prestigious, and in some cases historic, provenance, which further enhances their significance. Among them is Alberto Giacometti's Tête de femme floor lamp, formerly in the collection of Pierre and Patricia Kane Matisse, as well as a set of works by René Herbst created for the Aga Khan III, bearing witness to the dialogue between decorative modernity and the great international commissions of the interwar period. The ensemble also includes a rare "Persan" daybed by Eileen Gray (€400,000 to €600,000), a pair of Ours polaire armchairs by Jean Royère (€500,000 to €600,000), as well as a rare bronze and leather sofa by Jean-Michel Frank (€400,000 to €600,000), illustrating the richness and diversity of the decorative explorations of the period.

The Lalanne couple

A month after the spectacular sale of Claude Lalanne's Pomme de New York during Marquee Week 20/21 in Paris, a Pomme de Ben by François-Xavier Lalanne is set to be one of the highlights of the sale, estimated at €3,000,000 to €5,000,000. It will feature alongside several works by the Lalanne couple, including a Petit Lapin à collerette by Claude Lalanne (€100,000 to €200,000), confirming the now central place of their work in the history of a unique sculptural design movement of the second half of the 20th century.

Murano glass from the Liliane Fawcett collection

Finally, the sale will feature a significant selection of Italian glassware from the collection Themes & Variations: The Murano Glass Collection of Liliane Fawcett, comprising nearly eighty Murano vases by artists including Fulvio Bianconi, Flavio Poli, Dino Martens and Maurice Marinot. Among this collection, the Merletto vase, designed in 1953 by Fulvio Bianconi (€40,000 to €50,000), stands out as one of the most accomplished and iconic examples of the technical and poetic virtuosity of post-war Murano glassware.

Selected highlights

  • François-Xavier Lalanne, Pomme de Ben, estimate €3,000,000 to €5,000,000
  • Jean Royère, pair of Ours polaire armchairs, estimate €500,000 to €600,000
  • Eileen Gray, rare "Persan" daybed, estimate €400,000 to €600,000
  • Jean-Michel Frank, rare bronze and leather sofa, estimate €400,000 to €600,000
  • Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann, important Vautheret chandelier, estimate €300,000 to €500,000
  • Claude Lalanne, Petit Lapin à collerette, estimate €100,000 to €200,000
  • Armand-Albert Rateau, carpet, circa 1926, estimate €100,000 to €150,000
  • Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann, dining table, 1933, estimate €100,000 to €150,000
  • Jean Dunand, rare folding screens, estimate €40,000 to €60,000
  • Fulvio Bianconi, Merletto vase, 1953, estimate €40,000 to €50,000

The live auction takes place on 26 and 27 May, with the public exhibition open from 21 to 26 May.

(Press Release)

Related Market News

Your Complete Research Toolkit for Luxury Markets

Access the complete suite including:
- Visual Research Dashboards
- AI Research Chat Assistant
- Market Scenarios
- AI Topics
- Data Spaces
- Research Reports
- Workflows & Integrations
iPhone mockup