Career
Cuttoli"s original interests were in reviving carpet production in Algeria. Around 1910, she set up a workshop in her Algerian home to teach the trade to local women. Their works were then sold to haute couture houses in Paris.
In the same year, she opened Maison Myrbor (an transcript of her maiden name), a gallery and design house in Paris on Rue Vignon designed by Jean Lurçat.
The street included established art dealers, such as Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler. Maison Myrbor produced embroidered and appliqué dresses, some designed by Natalia Goncharova, offered a decoration department, and held major painting exhibitions for artists such as Salvador Dalí and Francis Cyril Rose.
Cuttoli commissioned tapestry cartoons from Georges Braque, Fernand Léger, Joan Miró, and Pablo Picasso in 1927. The following year, she turned her attention to reviving the Aubusson tapestry industry.
She encouraged additional avant-garde artists of the time to weave tapestries based upon their easel paintings.
These included Raoul Dufy, Le Corbusier, Lurçat, Henri Matisse, and Rouault.