Bruno Mathsson |
In 1929 he had an opportunity to begin borrowing books and magazines from the Röhsska Arts and Crafts Museum in Gothenburg. Curator Gustaf Munthe soon was sending boxes of books to him by train, and Mathsson educated himself by studying them.
In 1930 he won a scholarship and an opportunity to go to Stockholm to an exhibition that lauched the Swedish functionalist movement. It was at this time that he began to move away from the tradition designs of his father's workshop and develop a design style of his own.
Early in 1936 Munthe gave Mathsson the opportunity to have a one-man show, and its success marked the recognition of Mathsson as an important Swedish designer. A year later he was represented at the Paris Expo and won a Grand Prix for his Paris daybed. In attendance was Edgar Kaufmann, Jr., manager of the design department of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Two years later he ordered chairs from Mathsson for the museum.
During 1948-1949 Mathsson and his wife Karin visited the United States, and he was introduced by Kaufmann to some of the country's foremost architects. He returned to Sweden and began building his famous glass houses.
In the 1960s Mathsson and Piet Hein designed the Super-Elliptical and Super-Circle tables with Spanlegs. Some of his other famous designs are the Pernilla chair, the Eva chair and the Jetson chair.
Folding table metroretrofurniture.com |
Pernilla 3 lounge bonluxat.com |
Minister chair architonic.com |
Eva side chair moma.org |
Super-Elliptical table, designed with Piet Hein roxyklassik.dk |
Folding table moma.org |
Jetson chair en.klassik.dk |
The Super-Elliptical table is a standout; chrome-and-white is such a winning combo.
ReplyDeleteIt is truly such a clean, crisp looking piece!
DeleteThat book crib is awesome. It just makes me smile.
ReplyDeleteI'd give just about anything to own one of those. I've never seen one before.
DeleteI will take that red lounger!
ReplyDeleteCouldn't you just take the best nap ever in that thing?
DeleteThanks so much for your posts and helpful information. I'm in awe of your dedication to get this out and remain very grateful!
ReplyDeleteWriting this blog is such a great learning experience for me. I'd probably keep writing it, even if I had no readers.
DeleteJust discovered your blog and site. I love the mid-century stuff and look forward to following you. I really love the spun aluminum uplight above. Just lovely.
ReplyDeleteWelcome to the blog! I hope to see you around often.
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