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Cité table, 1930

Cité table with hollow bent steel legs, 1932. Provenance: Cité Universitaire de Nancy.

Cité table with hollow bent steel legs, 1932. Provenance: Cité Universitaire de Nancy. © Galerie Patrick Seguin.

Prototype of a dormitory room presented for the competition for the furnishings of the Cité Universitaire in Nancy, ca. 1930: Cité armchair, bed and table.

Prototype of a dormitory room presented for the competition for the furnishings of the Cité Universitaire in Nancy, ca. 1930: Cité armchair, bed and table. © Fonds Jean Prouvé. Centre Pompidou – MNAM/CCI-Bibliothèque Kandinsky-Dist. RMN-Grand Palais.

“Sanitarium table” project. Variant of the Cité table, not produced. Ateliers Jean Prouvé drawing, ca. 1932.

“Sanitarium table” project. Variant of the Cité table, not produced. Ateliers Jean Prouvé drawing, ca. 1932. © Fonds des Ateliers Jean Prouvé, Archives départementales de Meurthe-et-Moselle.

Cité no. 20 table, then TC 11, 1933.

Cité no. 20 table, then TC 11, 1933. © Collection privée.

Advertising brochure <i>Ateliers Jean Prouvé, Mobilier en acier,</i> Nancy, ca. 1935.

Advertising brochure Ateliers Jean Prouvé, Mobilier en acier, Nancy, ca. 1935. © Collection privée.

Table no. 20, variant with tapered feet, ca. 1935.

Table no. 20, variant with tapered feet, ca. 1935. © Galerie Patrick Seguin.

Tropique no. 501 table, 1951.

Tropique no. 501 table, 1951. © Galerie Patrick Seguin.

“Hotelery School, work tables”. Structure of Dactylo and Cité model tables. Ateliers Jean Prouvé drawing no. 10 030, 3 July 1946, by J.-M. Glatigny

“Hotelery School, work tables”. Structure of Dactylo and Cité model tables. Ateliers Jean Prouvé drawing no. 10 030, 3 July 1946, by J.-M. Glatigny © Fonds des Ateliers Jean Prouvé, Archives départementales de Meurthe-et-Moselle.

Headquarters of the Bourse Maritime, Paris. Room equiped with demountable Cité no. 500 tables and Métropole no. 305 chairs, ca. 1953.

Headquarters of the Bourse Maritime, Paris. Room equiped with demountable Cité no. 500 tables and Métropole no. 305 chairs, ca. 1953. © Galerie Patrick Seguin.

Demountable Cité no. 500 table. Provenance: Bourse Maritime, Paris.

Demountable Cité no. 500 table. Provenance: Bourse Maritime, Paris. © Galerie Patrick Seguin.

Demountable Cité no. 500 table, large model. Provenance: Bourse Maritime, Paris.

Demountable Cité no. 500 table, large model. Provenance: Bourse Maritime, Paris. © Galerie Patrick Seguin.

Cité table, 1930

The Cité table was one of the Ateliers Jean Prouvé’s longest-lasting models, from the original version for the Cité Universitaire, Nancy, in the early 1930s through the allmetal Tropique model of the 1950s.Originally intended for educational and hospital contexts, it came into its own in the domestic context as a desk or extra table. Its stable monobloc base meant it could be readily adapted to larger dimensions, and certain variants, with or without crossmembers, lent themselves to the making of large refectory and study tables. Dating from 1930, when sixty examples were made for the Cité Universitaire, Nancy, the basic model had a bent steel frame comprising two open-channel uprights joined by a sheet metal brace and set on two square-tube legs. A light frame supported an oak top holding a metal drawer with a cast aluminum handle. Several versions were made using this system, among them the table no. 20, produced in small batches during the 1930s. The uprights were closed-section, the (optional) brace was of square tube, and the solid wood or plywood top was set on metal brackets. The feet on some models—notably certain sanatorium tables—had a thinned out profile. Production went ahead more or less unchanged after the War, with the TC 11 model appearing in two versions from 1951 onwards: the Cité no. 500 table with an oak or lacquered aluminum top, and the demountable Tropique no. 501 table, whose round tube brace was fixed to the uprights with threaded rod. In 1951, over 150 Cité tables came out of the Ateliers Jean Prouvé, the great majority of them all-metal.