
Marty.
AAMN° d'inventaire | 30846 |
Format | 25.8 x 29.9 |
Détails | 274 p., numerous color photographs, publisher's hardcover. |
Publication | Paris, 2018 |
Etat | Nine |
ISBN | 9782871433392 |
Maurice Marty, multidisciplinary artist, architect, designer, illustrator, painter and sculptor was born in Paris in 1935. Maurice Marty set up his studio in Montparnasse at the end of the 1950s, first in Man Ray's studio and then in that of his friend, the actress Bernadette Lafont, on rue Campagne Première. He was also friends with Paco Rabanne, Johnny Hallyday, Jean-Pierre Kalfon, Jean Tinguely, Arman, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Sempé, César who commissioned him to create his studio... After studying architecture at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, he developed a boomerang concept from 1961 (the boom-twist sold over a million copies) and signed his first creations as an interior designer.
He designed the smoking room of the French ocean liner, and designed boutiques for airlines and ready-to-wear brands. He designed the first Benetton boutique (1969) and exhibited his paintings at the Axis gallery in 1973. In 1975, he created the first Armani boutique in Paris and the Pierre d'Alby shoe boutique in New York, and in 1986, the Jean-Paul Gaultier boutique at the Vivienne gallery, and the spectacular Orève brasserie (1988). At the same time, he continued to create furniture for galleries such as Downtown in Paris and Twenty First Gallery in New York.
He is also the author of jewelry, mirrors, lamps and a bicycle, the "Plume" bicycle for Franck Muller.
Maurice Marty, multidisciplinary artist, architect, designer, illustrator, painter and sculptor was born in Paris in 1935. Maurice Marty set up his studio in Montparnasse at the end of the 1950s, first in Man Ray's studio and then in that of his friend, the actress Bernadette Lafont, on rue Campagne Première. He was also friends with Paco Rabanne, Johnny Hallyday, Jean-Pierre Kalfon, Jean Tinguely, Arman, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Sempé, César who commissioned him to create his studio... After studying architecture at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, he developed a boomerang concept from 1961 (the boom-twist sold over a million copies) and signed his first creations as an interior designer.
He designed the smoking room of the French ocean liner, and designed boutiques for airlines and ready-to-wear brands. He designed the first Benetton boutique (1969) and exhibited his paintings at the Axis gallery in 1973. In 1975, he created the first Armani boutique in Paris and the Pierre d'Alby shoe boutique in New York, and in 1986, the Jean-Paul Gaultier boutique at the Vivienne gallery, and the spectacular Orève brasserie (1988). At the same time, he continued to create furniture for galleries such as Downtown in Paris and Twenty First Gallery in New York.
He is also the author of jewelry, mirrors, lamps and a bicycle, the "Plume" bicycle for Franck Muller.