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Showing posts with label Kaare Klint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kaare Klint. Show all posts

Friday, July 25, 2014

Scandinavian Collection at 1stdibs

1stdibs enjoyed record vintage furniture sales last year, selling over a billion dollars worth...an increase of 50% over the previous year.

This year founder Michael Bruno made a trip to Copenhagen and Stockholm in order to expand and add a special Scandinavian Modern collection to the popular website. Bruno calls Scandinavian design "the precursor to mid-century modern" and says there's still plenty of great pieces available in the areas he visited.

He furnishes his own home with half mid-century furniture and half antiques and says that Arne Jacobsen, Jean-Michel Frank and Gio Ponti are his personal favorites.

Here are some beautiful examples from the new collection.

From midcenturymagazine.com
All images from 1stdibs.com



Yellow Carnaby vases by Per Lütken

Sofa by Børge Mogensen

Finn Juhl coffee table

Upholstered Peacock chair by Hans Wegner

Kaare Klint sofa

Rack of Papa Bear chairs by Hans Wegner

Friday, January 17, 2014

In the store: Kaare Klint safari chairs

A remarkable pair of safari chairs designed by Kaare Klint are the latest addition to the store's seating selection. These beautiful pieces are made of leather and canvas on an oak frame and were originally purchased in Denmark.










Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Børge Mogensen

Børge Mogensen 
Børge Mogensen (1914-1972) was born in Aalborg, Denmark. He attended the Copenhagen School of Arts and Crafts. His mentor there was Kaare Klint, whose simple and functional furniture he admired. He later worked as Klint's teaching assistant at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts.

He apprenticed as a cabinetmaker under Klint during his time at the Royal Academy and became head of design at the Danish co-op FDB in 1942 after receiving his degree in architecture. He opened his own design office in 1950.

Under Klint he developed an appreciation for American Shaker furniture, which they both admired for its utilitarian design. Much of Mogensen's work was based on Shaker prototypes, and he became known for interpreting traditional forms into modernist designs.

Some of Mogensen's best known designs are the 1945 Spokeback sofa, 1950 Hunting chair and the 1959 Spanish chair.

danish-furniture.com and denmark50.com




Spokeback sofa
furnituredesign24.com

Hunting chair
danish-furniture.com

Spanish chair
denmark50.com

Sleigh chair
architonic.com

Runner chair
danish-furniture.com

Shaker style table
danish-furniture.com

Leather sofa
denmark50.com

Chest of drawers
architonic.com

Friday, August 26, 2011

Ole Wanscher

Ole Wanscher (1903-1985) was born in Denmark. He studied with Kaare Klint at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen and worked with him for three years following the completion of his studies. In 1927 he set up his own office, specializing in furniture design.

Like his mentor Klint, he was influenced by classical furnishings, particularly 18th century English furniture, as well as designs from Egypt, China and Greece. One of his most famous designs is the delicate Egyptian stool.

Upon the death of Kaare Klint in 1955, Wanscher took over his position at the Royal Academy, where he remained until 1973. While there, he used his vast knowledge of furniture history to write several books on the subject.

While many of Wanscher's most beautiful pieces were made with master cabinetmaker A. J. Iverson, he also had an interest in mass production. He had a successful relationship with P. Jeppesens Møbelfabrik A/S that began in the 1950s and lasted the rest of his professional career. He also designed pieces for France and Son.

From dmk.dk and wikipedia.org


Upholstered armchair
hammersby.com

Coffee table
collectorweekly.com

Cabinet
denmark50.com

Egyptian stool
svpply.com

Dining chairs
almondhartzog.com

Bentwood rocker
bondandbowery.com

Sofa
roomculture.de

Expandable dining table and chairs
modern-furniture.de

Rosewood cabinet
1stdibs.com

Senator series chairs
scandinavianmod.comS

Sleeping sofa
amsterdammodern.com

Friday, December 3, 2010

Finn Juhl

Finn Juhl (1912-1989) was born in Copenhagen and studied under Kaare Klint at the Royal Academy of Arts, where he graduated in 1934. Afterwards he took a job with the architect Vilhelm Lauritzen. The house he designed for himself during this period was widely acclaimed, but Juhl was principally becoming known as a furniture designer and is credited with pioneering the use of teak in furniture design.

Juhl began a longstanding collaboration with the cabinetmaker Neils Vodder in the late 1930s. Their pieces were frequently shown at the annual exhibitions of the Danish Cabinetmakers' Guild. His early chairs were handmade in small quantities, featuring the floating backs and seats which came to characterize his work and to emphasize its sculptural quality. Unlike his contemporaries, Juhl placed more value on form and less on function, a serious break with the Klint School.

Edgar Kaufmann Jr., whose father had commissioned Fallingwater from Frank Lloyd Wright, introduced Juhl´s work to America. By the early 1950´s Juhl, who had opened his own office, was designing a furniture collection for Baker, and an exhibit for the "Good Design" show in Chicago. He was also selected to design the Trusteeship Council Chamber for United Nations headquarters in New York.

Among Juhl´s notable designs are the Pelican chair (1940), Chieftain armchair (1949) and the Bwana chair and ottoman (1962). Juhl´s work won gold medals at several Milan Triennale, and was exhibited across Europe and the United States.

From lostcityarts.com and danish-furniture.com


Chieftain chair, 1949
danish-furniture.com

Rare double Chieftain chair, 1949
1stdibs.com

Pelican chair
finnjuhl.com

Bwana chair
treadwaygallery.com

48 chair
1stdibs.com

53 chair
1stdibs.com

Poet sofa,
danish-furniture.com

Table lamp
wright20.com

Teak desk
editoratlarge.com

Friday, November 26, 2010

Grete Jalk

Danish-born Grete Jalk (1920-2006) studied first at the School of Arts and Crafts, Copenhagen. Later she studied under Kaare Klint at the Danish Technical College. After apprenticing as a cabinetmaker, she opened a studio of her own in 1954 and began showing her work at the annual exhibitions of the Copenhagen Guild of Cabinetmakers.

Jalk´s pieces are often described as sculptural. Of all her work, the famed Plywood chair (1963), manufactured by Poul Jeppensen, best embodies this quality. It differs from any previous experiments with molded plywood by virtue of its sheer technical daring; despite being composed of two pieces, the effect is seamless and elegant. She also designed a well-known tubular steel chair for Fritz Hansen in 1964.

Jalk´s work as a furniture scholar is likewise noteworthy. Her 1987 book, The Art of Danish Furniture is an important contribution to the topic.

In 1946, she won the prestigious prize of the Copenhagen Joiners' Guild, and in 1963 she was awarded the Daily Mail International Furniture Competition award. She exhibited at the 1951 Triennale di Milano, the 1968 "Two Centuries of Danish Design" exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, and in 1968 at the Musee des Arts Decoratifs, Paris.

Along with her colleagues Finn Juhl and Hans Wegner, Jalk´s early work helped to propel Danish design to the cutting edge of international style.


From lostcityarts.com




Laminate chair
huffingtonpost.com


Stools
dwell.com

Daybed
1stdibs.com

Coffee table
mid2mod.com

Pair of armchairs
furniture-inc.de

Sofa
mid2mod.com

Flip-top bar cart
etsy.com - TheModernHistoric

Armchairs
1stdibs.com

Adjustable stool
1stdibs.com

High back armchair
midcenturymobler.com
Credenza
1stdibs.com