One of the museums I visited while in Avignon was the Angladon, a collection amassed by turn-of-the-last-century couturier Jacques Doucet. The guy mentored Paul Poiret and created fashions for the likes of Sarah Bernhardt and Liane de Pougy. His tastes in art ranged across a spectrum, but he liked Art Déco right much.
Here are some of the pieces I liked.
Black mask and crocodile mask, 19th Century Guinea:
Portrait of a woman, possibly Mary Stuart, 16th
Century French School:
(What entranced me was the headpiece that seems to grasp her at
the ears and center of the forehead. How does that even work?)
Bookcase, with books double-shelved:
Filing cabinet:
Bronze owl, André Derain, c1925:
Portrait of his wife, Tsuguharu Léonard Foujita, 1917:
Brush rest, China, from the time of Emperor Kângxi, 1661-1722:
“Rat Scarecrow”, China, 19th Century:
Snow in Louveciennes, Albert Sisley, 1874:
Half-open Door, Édouard Vuillard, 1891
This is just a reflection on the case holding the Vuillard and Sisley paintings:
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