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Poul Kjaerholm
Poul Kjaerholm (1929-1980) designed modern functionalist
furniture that was praised for its understated elegance
and clean lines. He studied at the School of Arts and
Crafts in Copenhagen where he would later teach, from
1952-56. He went on to become a lecturer and professor
in the furniture and interior design department at the
Academy of Art from 1957-76. Although he was formally
trained as a cabinetmaker, Kjaerholm was a strong proponent
for industrial production, and his work stands out among
that of his Danish contemporaries because of his extensive
use of steel frames rather than the traditional wood.
He did, however, design many of his seats in natural materials
like cane, canvas, leather and rope.
Inspired by Bauhaus design, Kjaerholm worked for several
years manipulating the form of his chromed steel and leather
chair that won the Grand Prix at the Milan Triennial in
1957. It appeared first in 1951 with an external frame,
subtle armrests and a halyard seat and back. Throughout
the fifties he designed several other versions, one with
a functional woven cane seat that would gently bend to
the pressures of the body to give a soft support, and
employed the technique of padding the cane around the
edges of the frame to make it more comfortable. The most
successful incarnation of the chair, in leather, possessed
an unadorned elegance that made him an international name.
A much later 1967 chair was loosely based on this design,
although it used the spring quality of the steel to create
a more elaborate curved base that seemed to float the
seat above it from the arm rests.
Kjaerholm is also known for a popular 1961 folding stool
in stretched leather and his 1965 "Hammock Chaise."
This work has an upholstered headrest and tilts the legs
up on the gently sloped woven cane seat. He also designed
a three legged dining room chair in 1957 with the simple
curved back rest that is seen often in chairs from this
period. One of his last pieces was the 1976 "Louisiana"
chair for the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art near Copenhagen,
which was made with and without arm rests and was produced
in a wide woven maple.
Kjaerholm designed mainly for Fritz Hansen and, after
1955, E. Kold Christensen Ltd. Unlike many other Danish
designers from the period, his work appeared at very few
of the Copenhagen Cabinetmaker's Guild Exhibitions because
he was working with newer materials. Although he maintained
a close relationship with natural woods and traditional
processes, his work was geared more towards mass production
and the energy of the modern movement. Kjaerholm was awarded
the Lunning Prize in 1958 and worked as an exhibition
designer in Denmark and abroad. The Mobilia Press wrote
of him, "when Poul Kjaerholm's furniture is evaluated
today, it is not by virtue of its quantity, but of its
supremacy." |
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