Telephone stand
On View In:
Gallery 379
Artist:   Attributed to Abel Faidy  
Title:   Telephone stand  
Date:   c. 1927  
Medium:   Ebonized walnut and maple marquetry with mechanized doors  
Dimensions:   44 x 26 1/2 x 13in. (111.8 x 67.3 x 33cm)  
Credit Line:   The Modernism Collection, gift of Norwest Bank Minnesota  
Location:   Gallery 379  

The American Art Deco movement is conveniently divided into two principal phases: Zigzag Moderne of the 1920s and Streamline Moderne of the 1930s, the first reflecting the dominance of the triangle and T-square and the second the French curve and the compass. Few works capture the essence of the Zigzag Moderne better than Abel Faidy's telephone cabinet and matching side chair. Among the contributing factors to this delightfully fragmented design were the interplay of light and shadows seen in America's new vertical cityscape (overlapping skyscrapers), Cubism, the mania for Egyptian and South American cultures (pyramids and ziggurat-shaped temples), and even electricity (jagged lighting bolts). The doors of the cabinet are wired to open when the candlestick telephone, housed inside, rings.

Artist/Creator(s)     
Name:   Faidy, Abel  
Role:   Designer  
Nationality:   American  
Life Dates:   American (born Switzerland), 1895-1965  
 

Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:    
Classification:   Furniture  
Physical Description:   Box with two doors sits on top of table, black triangles of various sizes throughout  
Creation Place:   North America, Switzerland, , ,  
Accession #:   98.276.291.1a,b  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts