Josephine Pebble Tweed Corner Sectional

$24,000.00

Details

The main ingredients of luxury are comfort and space, and with the Josephine Pebble Tweed Corner Sectional, you can have it all. Inspired by the Art Deco style and Jazz era grace of Paris in the 1930s and 40s, the rich, brown-toned tweed upholstery embraces the body, inviting stillness through comfort. Its expansive, wrap-around frame offers ample seating for multiple guests or room to stretch out all on your own. Designed to facilitate coziness, conversation and long stretches of relaxation, the Josephine Pebble Tweed Corner Sectional is a perfect reminder that great seating makes great rooms. Pair this sectional with other pieces from the Josephine Collection for a perfect look.

Editors' Note

Born Freda Josephine McDonald in 1906, Josephine Baker hailed from St. Louis, Missouri. At 15 she was discovered by a St. Louis vaudeville group and touring with the group eventually landed her the show Shufflin’ Along, taking her to New York just as the Harlem Renaissance was reaching its height. Josephine was discovered again, this time by American socialite Caroline Dudley for an all-Black vaudeville show in Paris — La Revue Nègre. Dubbed “the Black Venus,” by the French press, Josephine’s image inspired filmmakers who cast her in films including her 1927 silent film screen debut, Siren of the Tropics. In 1937, Josephine became an official French citizen, and by the end of the Second World War in 1945, the performer — who was was fluent in French, Italian and Russian — was the hero of her adopted nation, using her celebrity status to obtain information while performing behind enemy lines and passing information encoded onto sheet music with invisible ink. She would became a lieutenant in the Free French Air Force and would go on to crusade for equality in the US in the early years of the Civil Rights Movement. Josephine secured lodgings for herself and her entire band, dictating terms in her contract for integrated audiences, she battled publicly with the Ku Klux Klan, and in 1963 was the only woman to address the crowd at the March on Washington. After Martin Luther King Jr’s assassination in 1968, Coretta Scott King would approach her to consider assuming leadership of the Civil Rights Movement. Baker, who had adopted 12 children over the course of her life, refused, citing concerns for her children should she be killed. Baker passed away in 1975 at the age of 68. “I have never really been a great artist,” she told Ebony magazine earlier that year. “But I have loved and believed in art and the idea of universal brotherhood so much, that I have put everything I have into them, and I have been blessed.”

Details

The main ingredients of luxury are comfort and space, and with the Josephine Pebble Tweed Corner Sectional, you can have it all. Inspired by the Art Deco style and Jazz era grace of Paris in the 1930s and 40s, the rich, brown-toned tweed upholstery embraces the body, inviting stillness through comfort. Its expansive, wrap-around frame offers ample seating for multiple guests or room to stretch out all on your own. Designed to facilitate coziness, conversation and long stretches of relaxation, the Josephine Pebble Tweed Corner Sectional is a perfect reminder that great seating makes great rooms. Pair this sectional with other pieces from the Josephine Collection for a perfect look.

Editors' Note

Born Freda Josephine McDonald in 1906, Josephine Baker hailed from St. Louis, Missouri. At 15 she was discovered by a St. Louis vaudeville group and touring with the group eventually landed her the show Shufflin’ Along, taking her to New York just as the Harlem Renaissance was reaching its height. Josephine was discovered again, this time by American socialite Caroline Dudley for an all-Black vaudeville show in Paris — La Revue Nègre. Dubbed “the Black Venus,” by the French press, Josephine’s image inspired filmmakers who cast her in films including her 1927 silent film screen debut, Siren of the Tropics. In 1937, Josephine became an official French citizen, and by the end of the Second World War in 1945, the performer — who was was fluent in French, Italian and Russian — was the hero of her adopted nation, using her celebrity status to obtain information while performing behind enemy lines and passing information encoded onto sheet music with invisible ink. She would became a lieutenant in the Free French Air Force and would go on to crusade for equality in the US in the early years of the Civil Rights Movement. Josephine secured lodgings for herself and her entire band, dictating terms in her contract for integrated audiences, she battled publicly with the Ku Klux Klan, and in 1963 was the only woman to address the crowd at the March on Washington. After Martin Luther King Jr’s assassination in 1968, Coretta Scott King would approach her to consider assuming leadership of the Civil Rights Movement. Baker, who had adopted 12 children over the course of her life, refused, citing concerns for her children should she be killed. Baker passed away in 1975 at the age of 68. “I have never really been a great artist,” she told Ebony magazine earlier that year. “But I have loved and believed in art and the idea of universal brotherhood so much, that I have put everything I have into them, and I have been blessed.”

 

Additional Details

Tweed Corner Sectional Sofa

Color: Brown

Material: Solid Wood, Craft Tweed Fabric

Dimensions: 114.14" x 101.18" x 30.31" (290 cm x 257 cm x 77 cm)

Seat Height: 16.5”

Upholstery:

54% PC, 15% CO, 11% LI, 11% VI, 6% PL, 3% PA

Width: 55" (140 cm)

Weight: 24 oz per sq.yd

Pattern Repeat: None

Martindale: 35,000 T

UV Lightfastness: 7 on a scale of 8

Care Instructions: Dry clean using perchloroethylene and trichloroethyline, without adding water; reduced mechanical action and low temperatures required. Do not wash, chlorinate, tumble dry, spin or iron.

COM fabric accepted

Handcrafted in Portugal

Made to order

Ships worldwide in 12 - 16 weeks

Contact us for custom options

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