Furniture
MARTELL GALLERY
Galuchat coffee table
Art Deco Waterfall Coffee Table in Patched Polychrome Galuchat, in the Style of Jean-Michel Frank, France., 1960
Galuchat
Location: Miami
White-glove shipping available worldwide. Contact for quote.
Location: Miami
White-glove shipping available worldwide. Contact for quote.
47.50" length x 27.75" Width x 14" Height
A1956
$ 26,000.00
Further images
A refined low coffee table of pure waterfall or 'cascade' form — the rectangular top and sides formed as a single uninterrupted arc of inverted U-shape, resting directly on the...
A refined low coffee table of pure waterfall or "cascade" form — the rectangular top and sides formed as a single uninterrupted arc of inverted U-shape, resting directly on the floor with no leg articulation — entirely clad in a hand-applied patchwork marquetry of polychrome galuchat tiles. Galuchat, the French term for shagreen, is the processed skin of the stingray, distinguished by its natural surface of densely packed silica beads that give each tile a unique granular, pearl-like texture absorbing and scattering light in a way no lacquer or wood veneer can replicate.
The tiles are laid in a bold diagonal basket-weave pattern across the full surface — top, sides, and edges — in a restrained palette of sage green, taupe, dusty rose, warm cream, and grey-blue, the natural and hand-dyed tones of the individual skins creating a richly varied yet harmonious composition. This technique of assembling multiple galuchat patches into a geometric mosaic is among the most labour-intensive in the French Art Deco repertoire, requiring a skilled maroquinier to cut, match, and adhere each piece by hand.
Jean-Michel Frank was the most influential French interior designer of the 1930s, celebrated for an elegant minimalism that stripped ornament entirely and elevated raw material to the level of art. He was the first designer to introduce galuchat, parchment, mica, and straw marquetry as primary surface treatments for furniture — chosen not as decoration but as the essential "colour" of the piece. His waterfall table in shagreen, originally produced by the Buenos Aires firm Comte between 1937 and the early 1940s and subsequently commissioned by Hermès in ecru galuchat, stands as one of the most iconic objects in the history of modern furniture.
The tiles are laid in a bold diagonal basket-weave pattern across the full surface — top, sides, and edges — in a restrained palette of sage green, taupe, dusty rose, warm cream, and grey-blue, the natural and hand-dyed tones of the individual skins creating a richly varied yet harmonious composition. This technique of assembling multiple galuchat patches into a geometric mosaic is among the most labour-intensive in the French Art Deco repertoire, requiring a skilled maroquinier to cut, match, and adhere each piece by hand.
Jean-Michel Frank was the most influential French interior designer of the 1930s, celebrated for an elegant minimalism that stripped ornament entirely and elevated raw material to the level of art. He was the first designer to introduce galuchat, parchment, mica, and straw marquetry as primary surface treatments for furniture — chosen not as decoration but as the essential "colour" of the piece. His waterfall table in shagreen, originally produced by the Buenos Aires firm Comte between 1937 and the early 1940s and subsequently commissioned by Hermès in ecru galuchat, stands as one of the most iconic objects in the history of modern furniture.