Tag Archives: Art Deco

Vanished New York City Art Deco – The Richard Hudnut Salon

Detail rendering of the entrance to the Richard Hudnut Salon.

Architectural detail drawing of the entrance to the Richard Hudnut Salon at 693 Fifth Avenue. From a June 1, 1931 advertisement in the New York Times. Image from proquest.com.

In June 1931 the Richard Hudnut salon opened its new building at 693 Fifth Avenue. Here was another business contributing in making the ten block stretch from 50th to 60th Streets the most posh shopping center in the United States. It was New York’s equivalent of the Rue de la Paix in Paris or Bond Street in London. This is where all the high society ladies came to shop, lunch and gossip. And the chic, new Hudnut salon became one of their popular destinations. Ladies could purchase cosmetics, perfume, get a manicure, facial treatment or take exercise classes. The 1939 film The Women, perfectly parodies the Hudnut salon as the fictitious Sydney’s * (See Note).

 

Richard Hudnut circa, 1900.

Richard Hudnut, circa 1900. Image from cosmeticsandskin.com.

The son of a New York City pharmacist, Richard Hudnut (1855 – 1928) made his fortune as the first American to achieve international success in the cosmetic industry.  And after graduating from Princeton University, Hudnut went to France to investigate their perfume and cosmetic companies. Upon his return to the United States he established his company of selling French style makeup and perfumes to American women. He registered his name as a trademark in both France and the United States. And he transformed his family drugstore into a a cosmetics showroom. Hudnut eventually became so successful that he maintained business headquarters in New York City and Paris. Once making his fortune he retired in 1916. Hudnut sold his business to William R. Warner and Company. Under the new management the Hudnut company continued to flourish. So in 1930 they began construction of an elegant new Fifth Avenue showroom.

 

The commission for the building was awarded to two of the top architects of the time. This new Richard Hudnut Salon would be a collaboration between Ely Jacques Kahn (1884 -1 972) and Eliel Saarinen (1873 – 1950).

 

Ely Jacques Kahn, circa 1930.

Ely Jacques Kahn, circa 1930. Image from library.columbia.edu

 

By 1930 Kahn was one of the most prolific architects in New York City.  Working within the guidelines of the 1916 zoning resolution, his skyscrapers are text book examples of the set back style imposed by that law. Such buildings as 120 Wall Street, the Film Center Building, 100 Park Avenue and the Squibb Building are surviving examples of his best moderne work.

 

 

 

Eliel Saarinen, circa 1940.

Eliel Saarinen, circa 1940. Image from mfa.fi.

 

To label Finnish-American Saarinen just an architect is an understatement. Yes, he was an architect who had a major influence in the field. Similar to Frank Lloyd Wright, Saarinen often designed the interiors of his buildings along with the exteriors. Saarinen soon established himself as one of Finland’s top architects. After coming in second in the Chicago Tribune Tower competition, Saarinen and family moved to the United States in 1923. For the rest of his life, Saarinen continued as a leader not only in architecture but design as well.

 

The Architectural Forum said this about the collaboration:

If Ely Jacques Kahn and Eliel Saarinen should join forces in designing a shop building, the result would be interesting. As a matter of fact, they did and the result was. 

The Architectural Forum – September, 1931, Pg. 9.

Opening on June 1, 1931 the new Fifth Avenue building stood just north of 54th Street on a lot only 25 feet wide. The much larger Aeolian Building was right next door to the south. And whose ground floor tenant was the Hudnut cosmetic competitor, Elizabeth Arden.

 

New York Herald-Tribune ad ofJune 1, 1931 opening day advertisement for the Richard Hudnut Salon.

Richard Hudnut Salon opening day advertisement, June 1, 1931. New York Herald-Tribune, Pg. 32. Image from proquest.com.

 

The exterior design of the Hudnut salon fell solely to Saarinen. The narrow façade helped to make the building seem taller than its six stories. The only decoration of the marble clad façade were two implied pilasters and a simple friezelike pattern along the roofline.  At the street level two recessed bronze doors framing a shop window provided entrance to the salon. Elegant, raised Ambrac letters spelling Richard Hudnut were placed above the window. Saarinen’s clever trick of dividing the glazing of the upper floors into many panes, prevented the tenants from placing advertising in the windows.

 

The exterior the Richard Hudnut Salon, 1931.

The exterior of the Richard Hudnut Salon at 693 Fifth Avenue, 1931. Photograph by Nyholm & Lincoln. From the collection of The Museum of the City of New York.

Ground floor detail, Richard Hudnut Salon.

Ground floor detail of the Richard Hudnut Salon, 693 Fifth Avenue, 1931.(Photo by Irving Browning/The New York Historical Society/Getty Images)

 

As elegant as the exterior, the interior was even more so. Covering the terrazzo floor was a yellow and gray rug designed and woven by Loja Saarinen (wife of Eliel Saarinen). Adding to the richness of the salon was the casework and ceilings of zebra and primavera woods.

 

Door and woodwork detail on the ground floor of the Richard Hudnut salon.

Richard Hudnut door detail. This picture is a good example of the fine woodwork on the ground floor of the salon. Photograph by Nyholm & Lincoln. From the collection of The Museum of the City of New York.

A bold nickel silver frame surrounded the recessed gold dome of the lounge.  The woodwork and the bold metal work of circles and triangles was Kahn’s influence on the interior decoration. But all the elegant furniture is directly attributable to Saarinen.

 

1931 main room showroom and lounge.

Main floor showroom and lounge, 1931. Photograph by Nyholm & Lincoln. From the collection of The Museum of the City of New York.

 

Richard Hudnut Salon lounge ceiling detail, 1931.

Lounge ceiling detail showing dome and nickel silver frame, 1931. Photograph by Nyholm & Lincoln. From the collection of The Museum of the City of New York.

 

By taking a private elevator patrons gained access to the second floor reception. The mirror lined reception room led to the individual treatment rooms.

 

Second floor reception room.

Second floor salon reception room, 1931. Photograph by Nyholm & Lincoln. From the collection of The Museum of the City of New York.

Richard Hudnut Salon second floor reception room.

Another angle showing the second floor reception room and the decorative use of the wall mirrors, 1931. Photograph by Nyholm & Lincoln. From the collection of The Museum of the City of New York.

 

Dominating the ceiling of the reception room was a large light fixture. The mixed metal and glass, 8 point star infused the space with soft indirect lighting. It is likely this was another Kahn design.

 

Reception room ceiling light detail.

Reception room ceiling light detail. Photograph by Nyholm & Lincoln. From the collection of The Museum of the City of New York.

Second floor reception room lounge.

Lounge off the second floor reception room. Photograph by Nyholm & Lincoln. From the collection of The Museum of the City of New York.

Treatment room in the Richard Hudnut Salon.

The place to be pampered. A second floor treatment room of the Richard Hudnut Salon. Photograph by Nyholm & Lincoln. From the collection of The Museum of the City of New York.

 

In 1955 the Warner-Hudnut Company merged with Lambert Pharmacal Company. And it was around this time the Richard Hudnut Salon closed its doors. Today a Valentino designer store occupies the site of the salon and its neighbor to the north. While still an upscale establishment, it definitely lacks the elegance of the Kahn & Saarinen design of ninety years ago.

 

The Richard Hudnut Salon in 1948.

A 1948 photograph showing the Richard Hudnut Salon and its Fifth Avenue neighbors. The black and white doorway to the right is the Elizabeth Arden shop. Wurts Brothers photograph. Image from the Museum of the City of New York.

 

2019 view of 693 Fifth Avenue.

693 Fifth Avenue, June, 2019. Image from Google Maps.

 

* Originally I had mistakenly said the name of the fictitious salon in the movie The Women was Blacks. Laurie Gordon has correctly informed me that the salon in the film was Sydney’s. Thank you, Laurie.

Sources:

New York 1930: Architecture and Urbanism Between the Two World Wars

The Architectural Forum

Cosmeticsandskin.com

The New York Herald-Tribune

 

Anthony & Chris (The Freakin’, Tiquen’ Guys)

Hanging Around – Our collection of Art Deco Art

When it comes to creating an Art Deco atmosphere in the home it’s the details that count. And that includes what hangs on the walls. This post will look at some of the pieces that we have in our Art Deco collections. While it is nice to have original art work, this is all about appearance and not if the piece is original or reproduction.

 

ANTHONY’S COLLECTION

The First Piece

In 1982 when I started to collect Art Deco this was the first piece of art I purchased. I came across this reproduction of William Welsh’s Winter at the Englishtown Auction, a huge flea market not far from where I use to live in New Jersey. The only problem with it was the frame it had. Here is a recreation of how it looked when I found it.

 

Rustic wood frame for Welsh's print of Winter.

A recreation of the frame my print of Winter was in when I bought it in 1982.

 

Being 18 years old, and very snobbish, I felt the frame lacked sophistication. I asked the vendor if I could buy the print only. Being very nice he said yes and let me have it for only $5.00.

 

And here is that print after I had it matted and reframed. It has been with me now for almost forty years and it will always have a special place in my home.

 

Winter, by William Weldon Welsh for the February, 1931 cover of the Woman's Home Companion.

Winter. By William Weldon Welsh for the February, 1931 cover of the Woman’s Home Companion.

 

 

Tamara de Lempicka

Madame d'Ora photograph of Tamara de Lempicka, 1931.

FRANCE – JANUARY 01, 1931: Tamara de Lempicka, in a dress by Marcel Rochas. Paris. Photography by d’Ora, around 1931. (Photo by Imagno/Getty Images) [Tamara de Lempicka in einem Kleid von Marcel Rochas. Paris. Photographie von d’Ora, um 1931.]

In our opinion, one of the artists who really exemplifies the Art Deco era, would be the Polish artist, Tamara de Lempicka (1898-1980). Of course original Lempicka paintings will never be in our price range. But modern reproductions suffice just fine. Her style, subject matter (both classical and modern) and use of bold colors instantly adds a sophisticated Deco touch to any room.

 

Tamara de Lempicka's Portrait of Dr. Boucard and Portrait of Madame M.

Portrait of Dr. Boucard and Portrait of Madame M.

 

Here are two prints of de Lempicka’s work that I framed myself. Because they are not a standard size, the bottom of the both extend below the matte. But it was a lot less expensive than getting them professionally done and they still give the effect I was after. On the left is Portrait of Dr. Boucard (1929) and on the right is Portrait of Madame M (1932).

 

Tamara de Lempicka's Portrait of Madame Allan Bott.

Portrait of Madame Allan Bott.

 

The Portrait of Madame Allan Bott (1929) I have on the landing of my staircase. I love Lempicka’s use of stylized backgrounds of either abstract geometric shapes as in the portrait of the doctor or of a cityscape.

 

Pochoir & Collotype

 

These next two pieces, I do not know much about, but they are vintage. What I do know by looking at them is the pochoir is typical 1920s and the collotype is pure late 1930s. The pochoir and collotype that I own are very feminine. I believe young ladies were their target audience.

 

Stylized 1920s pochoir print.

Pochoir print. Typical style of mid to late 1920s with its elaborate, stylized background and 18th century subject matter. Still in its original matte and frame.

Pochoir is a stencil process. In fact pochoir is French for stencil. Becoming popular in the the 1890s pochoir fell from favor in the later 1930s. But at its height during the Art Nouveau and Art Deco eras, many pieces prints were made using the process. Brushing ink through precut stencils created each layer of the print or added color to a black and white image. Click here for more about the technique and history of pochoir process. I would love to know more about this print. It is French and signed, unfortunately, I cannot read the stamp signature in the bottom right corner. There may be more information underneath the matte, but I am not so curious to take it out of its frame.

 

The pochoir print on my bedroom wall.

The pochoir print on my bedroom wall next to a 1950s photolithography print of the George Washington Bridge.

 

While my pochoir print is intricately elaborate, with its detail, my collotype is a model of streamline simplicity. A collotype is a dichromate photographic process invented in 1855. I won mine from the online auction site Everything But the House last year. I did need to frame the print as the original frame from the 1930s was falling apart.

 

The Art Deco collotype I won on ebth.com still in its original frame.

My Art Deco collotype inside its original frame. Image from ebth.com.

 

The reframed Art Deco collotype.

And here is the collotype in its new frame. I had the framer reuse the original glass.

If I am to be completely honest, I find the image to be a bit creepy. She seems to be somewhere between a “Stepford Wife” and one of the children from The Village of the Damned. But it is very late 1930’s and goes well in that corner of my TV room.

 

The collotype in my TV room corner.

Collotype in the corner of my TV room, with a Lloyd Manufacturing Co. chair and an unmarked uplighter floor lamp.

 

I wanted the new frame to match the original as close as possible. I think my choice keeps the 1930s flavor of the original.

 

Woodcuts & Etching

Also hanging around in my TV are two woodcuts and etching, from the 1930s and 1940s. The etching was another purchase from the Golden Nugget Flea Market, readers of this blog know that is one of my favorite places to go antiquing. I am particularly partial to Depression era urban scenes in what has come to be known as “the WPA style”.

 

About seven years ago I bought this woodcut from the 272 Antiques & Collectibles Marketplace in Stevens, Pennsylvania (just south of Adamstown).

 

The art of the woodcut. This was one of 12 used in a 1941 calendar.

Woodcut from a 1941 calendar.

I believe it is from a 1941 calendar produced by a Chicago art school as a fund raiser. I was struck by the use of the bold orange ink instead of the usually black. And the stylization of the lumberjacks sawing a log is very characteristic of late American Depression era art.

 

But my favorite of the woodcuts that I own, is “The Wounded Stag”. Yes, the subject matter is on the gruesome side, but it is a striking piece of art. Engraved by the Polish artist, Stanislaw Ostoja-Chrostowski (1897 – 1947), in 1930 and featured in an exhibit of lithography and wood engravings sponsored by the Art Institute of Chicago.

 

Stanislaw Ostoja-Chrostowski's "The Wounded Stag" sold by the Art of Institute of Chicago, 1930-1931.

Woodcut “The Wounded Stag” (1931) by Stanislaw Ostoja-Chrostowski. Sold by the Art Institute of Chicago.

 

For $5.00 dollars one could purchase “The Wounded Stag” from the show, unframed. The date on my print is 1931 and the frame gives every indication of being from that time as well. There seems to be two versions of this image, a smaller size one is in the collection of the Dallas Museum of Art. According to the show catalog bookplates by Chrostowski were for sale for $10.00. It is possible that the smaller version is one of the bookplates.

As I mentioned earlier, I love the look of Depression era / WPA style art. So when I came across the etching titled “Outskirts” (1940) at the Golden Nugget Flea Market I quickly snatched it up. This bleak winter scene features a few men near a railroad trestle and some factories in what could be the Bronx or Queens, New York.

 

Jacob Friedland's 1940 etching "Outskirts". New York City WPA Art Project.

“Outskirts” (1940) by Jacob Friedland. New York City WPA Art Project.

 

Jacob Friedland is the artist. There is not much information about him. He is most associated as the engraver for the etchings of Louis Lozowick. In 1933 both Lozowick and Friedland taught etching and engraving at the John Reed Club School of Art in Manhattan. “Outskirts” is one of the few pieces of art that is by Friedland, the other is a similar subject called “Backyards”. “Outskirts” is a commission of the New York City WPA Art Project a branch of the Federal Art Project (FAP). To date it is the only actual artwork of the WPA that I own. But I’m always on the lookout for more.

Anthony's collection of woodcuts and etchings.

Anthony’s TV room showing his collection of 1930s / 1940s etching and woodcuts.

 

The above photos show the woodcuts and etching on the wall in my TV room. They help to deflect attention away from my late 1990s loveseat, one piece of furniture that I really want to replace.

 

CHRIS’ COLLECTION

As mentioned, we prefer original art when possible. Sometimes we luck out. Here is a  Navy campaign advertisement by J.C. Leyendecker (1874-1951) we picked up at an antique mall several years ago. The Navy kept using this ad from 1918 – World War II. Leyendecker is best known for his Arrow Collars series. And, his work graced covers for The Saturday Evening Post, Collier’s, Literary Digest and more. He understood not only the importance of art as art, but also the emotional connection between the picture and the viewer.

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Original 1918 Navy poster by J.C. Leyendecker

With the exception of the Leyendecker poster, I lucked out and found all of the following at my local Goodwill.

Drink posters are always popular.  Colorful and dynamic, an original print will easily set you back thousands of dollars. Good quality reproductions can be purchased at extremely reasonable prices. And, reproductions are a more manageable size for the average home.

“Bitter Campari” is by Spiratello Leonetto Cappiello (1875-1942) and designed in 1912. The original poster size is 38.98 x 27.17 inches.

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Spiratello Leonardo Cappiello – 1921 (repro)

“Cognac Jacques” is a reproduction of a poster by Camille Bouchet (1799 – 1890). The 1887 original measures 66 ¼ x 50 inches. During his lifetime, Bouchet is noted  for producing his work in a variety of sizes and finishes to make his work accessible to the consumer (and, no doubt increase his income).  This advertisement was used and remained immensely popular through 1925. It may not be a deco period piece, but certainly was part of the art deco period. Wouldn’t it look nice in your deco room?

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Cognac Jacques – Bouchet – 1910 (repro)

“Kina” is based on the original by American artist Robys (Robert Wolff, 1905-1977). The original 1937 art has the word LILLET between Kina and the bottom text. An original poster is 79 x 52 inches. Hope you have a lot of wall space!

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Kina – Robys – 1937 (repro)

“Champagne” is by J. Stall (1874-1933) and designed in 1930. Like “Kino”, the original is quite large at 63 x 46.6 inches. Very little is known about the artist though he may have used the alias J. Spring.

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Champagne – J. Stall – circa 1930 (repro)

“Spumanti” is circa 1920 by Carlo Nicco (1883-1973). The original artwork has the text “Martini & Rossi” and “TORINO” under the text shown. Little information is available about this artist.

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Spumanti – Carlo Ricco – 1920 (repro)

“Martini” is a contemporary work by Steve Forney. A commercial artist, he purposely emulates the art deco style with a modern twist.

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Martini – contemporary art

In the thirties style is “Brook Farm” by contemporary artist, Ruth Franklin.   This is an artist’s proof – essentially a test run before final production. Originally from Kent, England, she now lives and works from her home in Decatur, Georgia.

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Brook Farm – contemporary art, Ruth Franklin

Hoyland Bettinger (1890-1950) created a series of coastal wood engravings in the 1930’s. This is an original work entitled “Perce Fisherman”. Bettinger was born in Lima, NY and relocated to Newton Lower Falls, Mass. He vacationed frequently in Perce, Quebec and later moved to California. While living and working in Carmel, he slipped on some loose rocks and fell to his death.

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Perce Fisherman – Hoyland Bettinger, original art, circa 1930

“The Café De Paris” is another original work we own. This light-hearted Parisian scene is by French Artist, Marie Louise Ogier (1912-2003).

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Circa 1930 – original by Marie Louise Ogier

Produced between 1930-1939, my original Diana the Huntress wall plaque is large and heavy. I purchased this at a antique store Indiana. This example has a steel core built up with plaster gypsum and has its original factory gesso coating.

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1930’s Diana the Huntress plaque as displayed in my living room. Quite the focal point!

There isn’t a lot of information online. However, my research indicates that some are incised with “G.R 1935”, mine is not. Both originals and lighter weight plastic reproductions are available online. And, depending on size and composition, are priced from several hundred to several thousands of dollars. They are available in sizes from 18 inches to 33.5 inches.

While my example has a gilded scarf, others are completely plain or heavily ornamented with silver and gold leaf. You can also find examples backed with mirror.

So, here you have just a sampling of our art collections. Whether an original work of art or a good quality reproduction, if it brings you joy, it’s worth the price! Don’t forget to check those bins at your local thrift store. Or, dig a little at the flea market. You just never know what you’ll find hanging around.

 

Chris & Anthony (The Freakin’, Tiquen’ Guys)