Not currently on display at the V&A

Table

ca. 1930 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

In the 1930s the surrealist artist Eileen Agar lived in a flat in Bramham Gardens, Kensington, London. Her friend Rodney Thomas, a young architect, designed the interiors of her flat and another in the same building for her lover, and later husband, Joseph Bard. This table was designed for Bard's dining room where it sat against a curved banquette in a niche. At a later date an electric socket was fitted in the centre of the linoleum table top to power a lamp. The wardrobe that Thomas designed for Eileen Agar's bedroom is also in the V&A collection. Both the wardrobe and the table were unique pieces not intended to be serially produced. Thomas's designs show an awareness of European functionalism, for example the use of linoleum, but also an empathy with the more dramatic effects associated with French Art Deco, as seen in the sculptural form of the pedestal base.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Stained wood and linoleum
Brief description
Stained wood table, designed by Rodney Thomas, London, ca.1930.
Physical description
Stained wood table with linoleum top and electric socket for lamp in centre.
Dimensions
  • Height: 71cm
  • Depth: 105.4cm
  • Length: 160.5cm
CW/LW 7.1.10
Style
Gallery label
TABLE Designed by Rodney Thomas (1902-1996) Possibly made by Army and Navy Stores, Victoria Street, London lacquered wood and linoleum 1930 This dining room table was designed for the Earl's Court flat of the writer and critic Joseph Bard, which interconnected with the flat designed by Thomas for Eileen Agar. Thomas's curved furniture for these flats showed the influence of streamlined international modern design. Bequeathed by Eileen Agar W.1-1992(1992-2006)
Credit line
Bequest of Eileen Agar
Summary
In the 1930s the surrealist artist Eileen Agar lived in a flat in Bramham Gardens, Kensington, London. Her friend Rodney Thomas, a young architect, designed the interiors of her flat and another in the same building for her lover, and later husband, Joseph Bard. This table was designed for Bard's dining room where it sat against a curved banquette in a niche. At a later date an electric socket was fitted in the centre of the linoleum table top to power a lamp. The wardrobe that Thomas designed for Eileen Agar's bedroom is also in the V&A collection. Both the wardrobe and the table were unique pieces not intended to be serially produced. Thomas's designs show an awareness of European functionalism, for example the use of linoleum, but also an empathy with the more dramatic effects associated with French Art Deco, as seen in the sculptural form of the pedestal base.
Bibliographic reference
'Recent acquisitions of furniture and woodwork at the Victoria and Albert Museum'. Burlington Magazine June 1993, vol. CXXXV, no. 1083, pp. 443-448. This item and its pair (W.34-1990) illustrated as item XVI.
Collection
Accession number
W.1-1992

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Record createdNovember 4, 2002
Record URL
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