Didier Aaron (Q3026893)

De Wikidata
Aller à la navigation Aller à la recherche
résistant et antiquaire français
modifier
Langue Libellé Description Également connu comme
français
Didier Aaron
résistant et antiquaire français
    anglais
    Didier Aaron
    French antiquarian seller and art dealer (1923-2009)

      Déclarations

      Didier Aaron (français)
      0 référence
      0 référence
      0 référence
      27 avril 1923Grégorien
      1 référence
      0 référence
      1 référence
      Mr. Aaron, a pillar of the world of French antiques dealers, was one of the last of the specialist dealers of so-called fff, for fine French furniture, who went into business right after World War II. He set up branches in New York, Los Angeles and London — unheard of in the 1980s — and is perhaps the first antiques dealer to ask a decorator to work under the same roof, which proved a lasting benefit to both professionals.Born in Paris in April 27, 1923, the son of Raoul Aaron, a banker, and his wife, Jeanne, Mr. Aaron grew up amid his mother’s artistic friends, including the painter Marie Laurencin and the Paris decorator and designer Jean-Michel Frank. He studied law and the history of art and letters at the Lycée Janson-de-Sailly in Paris, but at 18, during World War II, he joined the French Resistance in Vercors, in southern France.He worked as a liaison agent for the French Free Forces, later gathering information for the United States Army in southern France in 1944. (anglais)
      1 référence
      Born in Paris in April 27, 1923, the son of Raoul Aaron, a banker, and his wife, Jeanne, Mr. Aaron grew up amid his mother’s artistic friends, including the painter Marie Laurencin and the Paris decorator and designer Jean-Michel Frank. He studied law and the history of art and letters at the Lycée Janson-de-Sailly in Paris, but at 18, during World War II, he joined the French Resistance in Vercors, in southern France.He worked as a liaison agent for the French Free Forces, later gathering information for the United States Army in southern France in 1944. (anglais)
      1 référence
      Mr. Aaron, a pillar of the world of French antiques dealers, was one of the last of the specialist dealers of so-called fff, for fine French furniture, who went into business right after World War II. He set up branches in New York, Los Angeles and London — unheard of in the 1980s — and is perhaps the first antiques dealer to ask a decorator to work under the same roof, which proved a lasting benefit to both professionals.Born in Paris in April 27, 1923, the son of Raoul Aaron, a banker, and his wife, Jeanne, Mr. Aaron grew up amid his mother’s artistic friends, including the painter Marie Laurencin and the Paris decorator and designer Jean-Michel Frank. He studied law and the history of art and letters at the Lycée Janson-de-Sailly in Paris, but at 18, during World War II, he joined the French Resistance in Vercors, in southern France.He worked as a liaison agent for the French Free Forces, later gathering information for the United States Army in southern France in 1944 (anglais)

      Identifiants

       
      modifier
      modifier
        modifier
          modifier
            modifier
              modifier
                modifier
                  modifier
                    modifier