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  1. Armand-Albert Rateau (born 24 February 1882 in Paris; died there 20 February 1938) was a French furniture maker and interior designer. In 2006, The Grove Encyclopedia of Decorative Arts characterized him as "the most eminent of the ensembliers, the high-style designer-decorators" who worked with luxury materials for the socially ...

  2. Armand-Albert Rateau, né le 24 février 1882 dans le 3 e arrondissement de Paris [1], ville où il est mort le 20 février 1938 en son domicile dans le 6 e arrondissement [2], est un dessinateur, meublier, décorateur et architecte français.

  3. View Armand-Albert Rateaus 408 artworks on artnet. Find an in-depth biography, exhibitions, original artworks for sale, the latest news, and sold auction prices. See available design, sculpture, and works on paper for sale and learn about the artist.

    • French
  4. Designer: Armand-Albert Rateau (French, Paris 1882–1938 Paris) Date: ca. 1925. Medium: Bronze, basalt, mirror glass. Dimensions: 55 3/16 × 15 3/4 × 31 1/2 in. (140.2 × 40 × 80 cm) Classification: Furniture-Wood. Credit Line: Purchase, Edward C. Moore Jr. Gift, 1925. Accession Number: 25.169

  5. Armand-Albert Rateau trained as a sculptor at the Ecole Boulle from 1894 to 1898 then worked as a draughtsman for Georges Hoentschel, designer of the Union Centrale des Arts Décoratifs pavilion at the Exposition Universelle in Paris in 1900. Aged 24, he was appointed artistic director of Lucien Alavoine & Cie, specialised in furnishing fabrics ...

  6. 12 de abr. de 2024 · Steeped in the Moderne style, the interwar designer Armand-Albert Rateau also nodded to ancient ecclesiastical architecture to add some god-given glamour to his opulent schemes. Take these three 1920s bathrooms, conceived for a French couturière, a Spanish duchess and an American socialite, which borrow from Romanesque churches ...

  7. Overview. Armand Albert Rateau. (1882—1938) Quick Reference. ( b 1882; d 1938). French interior decorator and furniture designer. He was the most eminent of the ensembliers, the high-style, designer–decorators who used such luxury materials as ebony, ivory, shagreen ... From: Rateau, Armand Albert in The Grove Encyclopedia of Decorative Arts »