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Ward Bennett

Ward Bennett Enron Office Chair

Ward Bennett Enron Office Chair

Regular price $500.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $500.00 USD
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Ward Bennett Enron Office Chair 
(1) Ward Bennett Enron Carved Office Chair Upholstery> Floral Pattern Frame> Solid Cherry ~These Office Chairs Came From The 49th and 50th Floors of 1400 Smith Street, ENRON`s Corporate Headquarters, where the offices of the Corporate Executives included the CEO, COO and CFO~ Price is for a set of (4) chairs Multiple sets available

Dimensions
24″ Width x 24″ Depth x 32″ Height Seat Height>18″ Arm Height > 24″ 

Condition

Very Good Condition

Preparation, Timing and Shipment

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Brickel Associates
Ward Bennett Quite simply, there is no area of art and design in which Ward Bennett has not been involved. His career evolved from his teen years onward, when he left home at thirteen and began traveling at sixteen. Travel, he says has continually been a prevailing influence on his work. Early on, he undertook various studies in the fine arts including drawing at the Porto Romano school in Florence and in Paris with Brancusi, painting in New York with Hans Hoffman and sharing space at the Clay Club with Louise Nevelson. His sculpture was exhibited at the Whitney Annual of 1944. Best known for his interiors, Mr. Bennett`s projects include residence in New York, London, Venice and Rome, as well as his own quarter–a Manhattan apartment atop the Dakota, a country house in Long Island and a flat in Paris. In the commercial category, works encompass a national network of showrooms for Brickel, projects for Chase Manhattan Bank and consultant plans for the Solow Building Corporation. In 1963, he began a collaboration with Brickel Associates, designing first furniture and later textiles. He is considered a prodigious designer of objects: china, glassware and silver for Tiffany and Company; flatware for Supreme; porcelain for Sasaki; and, leather goods for Hermes. Bennett designs are well represented in the Museum of Modern Art`s permanent collection and in the Cooper-Hewitt Museum. Brickel Associates became Geiger Brickel. The company was recently acquired by Herman Miller.

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