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Arne
Jacobsen (1902-71)
Jacobsen
began training as a mason before studying at the Royal
Danish Academy of Arts, Copenhagen where he won a silver
medal for a chair that was then exhibited at the 1925
Exposition Internationale des Art Decoratifs in Paris. Influenced
by Le Corbusier, Gunnar Asplund and Ludwig Mies van der
Rohe, Jacobsen embraced a functionalist approach from
the outset. He was among the first to introduce
modernist ideas to Denmark and create industrial
furniture that built upon on its craft-based design
heritage.
First
among Jacobsen’s important architectural commissions
was the Bellavista housing project, Copenhagen
(1930-1934). Best known and most fully integrated
works, are the SAS Air Terminal and the Royal Hotel
Copenhagen for which Jacobsen designed every detail from
sculptural furnishings such as his elegant Swan and Egg
chairs (1957-1958) to textiles, lighting, ashtrays and
cutlery.
During
the 1960’s, Jacobsen’s most important work was a
unified architectural and interior design scheme for St.
Catherine’s College, Oxford, which, like his earlier
work for the Royal Hotel, involved the design of
site-specific furniture. Jacobsen’s work remains
appealing and fresh today, combining free-form
sculptural shapes with the traditional attributes of
Scandinavian design, material and structural integrity.
Famous
furniture by Arne Jacobsens:
-
Egg
Chair (1958)
- Swan
chair (1958)
- Series
7 chair (1955)
- Ant
chair (1951)
- Oxford
chair (1965)
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