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The World of Jean-Michel Frank

Frank’s interiors possessed a quiet power, transforming space through restraint, proportion, and timeless elegance.

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Photo featured in Jean Michel Frank by Assouline.

In 2019, Assouline published Jean-Michel Frank by Laure Verchère, a portrait of an iconic yet elusive figure whose work reshaped the decorative arts of the twentieth century. Six years later, the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris honors the master by dedicating a room to him within its exhibition marking the centenary of Decorative Arts, where the screens created for François Mauriac’s apartment are on view. This moment invites a return to the exceptional life and legacy of a seeker of the absolute, revisited here by Laurence Benaïm, Paris editor for Assouline, who devoted a biography to Frank.

In his gallery on the rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré, regulars referred to the small office where he sat as “the confessional.” Considered one of the greatest decorators of the twentieth century, Jean-Michel Frank designed interiors for Vicomtesse Marie-Laure de Noailles, patron and muse to artists, filmmakers, and musicians including Man Ray, Luis Buñuel, Alberto Giacometti, Salvador Dalí, and Francis Poulenc. His clients also included Pierre Drieu de la Rochelle, Cole Porter, and Nelson Rockefeller. A cousin of Anne Frank, Jean-Michel Frank came of age during the Dreyfus Affair and endured personal tragedies that marked him forever. By laying bare his era, he illuminated the final embers of a doomed humanism. “There was, therefore, in Paris, in the life of style, a Frank moment,” observed Jacques Lassaigne, former director of the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris.

Collaborating with artists such as Diego and Alberto Giacometti, couturiers like Elsa Schiaparelli, architects including Emilio Terry, and painters such as Christian Bérard, Frank developed a body of work that stands as a manifesto of neoclassicism, irreducible to fashion. He belongs to the same intellectual world as Walter Benjamin or Stefan Zweig, a transmitter of memory sacrificed by History. As Laure Verchère recalls in her extraordinary book, “Of utmost importance to the development of Frank’s style was the influence of Eugenia Errázuriz, a wealthy Chilean widow who established her residence in Paris between the wars. Although rarely mentioned today except in connection with her nephew Arturo López, it could be said that Frank owed a great deal to her.” This is a book one does not simply read, but visits, a pure and inspiring place for reverie. “We work not in centimeters, but in millimeters,” Jean-Michel Frank once said.

Photo featured in Jean Michel Frank by Assouline.

In 1941, his German cousins, refugees in Amsterdam, tried in vain to obtain visas for the United States. Among them was Anne Frank, who would die of typhus in Bergen-Belsen in 1945, her diary abandoned in the annex. Frank chose despair over witnessing the disintegration of a Europe hunting its own suspects, echoing Stefan Zweig’s words on “the most appalling defeat of reason and the most savage triumph of brutality.” Jean Cocteau waited until 1945 to pay tribute to him, describing a tightrope walker above the Occupation’s dark years: “Jean-Michel Frank loved the invisible of true elegance, and everything that caught the eye seemed odious to him.” The stupidity of a form, the vulgarity of a fabric, the arrogance of a color drove him away. Perhaps he leapt from his era because he found it uninhabitable and foresaw its formlessness. His entire body of work bears the trace of an ideal. As Verchère explains, “Whereas modern artists such as Herbst or Mallet-Stevens sought to eradicate the past and start anew, Frank, always on the fringes, became estranged from his own time. Though a symbol of his era, it was this very distance that gave his work its mystery, poetry, and undiminished immediacy.”

In an inconsolable quest for beauty, Frank rediscovered the essence of the classical spirit, the grandeur of the eighteenth century nourished by imagination. His interiors, often haunted, carry its imprint. A friend of René Crevel, he became the inspiration for Jacques de Lacretelle’s novel Silbermann. Far from the Belle Époque and its heady scents of heliotrope and iris, materials were stripped and transformed: straw lost its rustic blondness to brush, thread by thread, across pared-down surfaces; lamp bases of industrial glass rose like the towers of New York, that “standing city” beloved by Paul Morand. Desks and tables were rendered impossibly slender, never exceeding the limits of material and structure. With Frank, reduction is never dry; it proceeds through evocation. A lamp is a torch, a crosspiece. A table, an inverted U. An armchair is not reduced to function but elevated to sensation: comfortable. “For me, the art of interior decoration has only one absolute principle,” he said. “Everything is permitted to love.”

Photo featured in Jean Michel Frank by Assouline.

Jean-Michel Frank never attended a school of architecture or design. Yet in the 1920s and 1930s, this self-taught decorator refined a singular style that became a benchmark of Art Deco sophistication. Gold, silk, marble, and fine wood veneers were paired with straw marquetry, parchment, plaster, leather, canvas, and distressed oak. Giacometti’s figures became masks behind which light concealed itself; Dalí’s ghosts dissolved into the perspective of folding screens; Christian Bérard placed shipwrecked figures on imagined shores. Through Frank, the era continues to live at home.

More than a decorator, Jean-Michel Frank was a master of perception and memory, attentive to the vibrations and nuances of time. His motto could be summed up simply: doors and windows, and nothing else. No ornament, nothing beyond necessity. And yet, what is necessary becomes the most perfect ornament of all.

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The Legends Collection Jean-Michel Frank
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The Legends Collection Paris by Paris
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