gothic revival side chair
Transcription
gothic revival side chair
GOTHIC REVIVAL SIDE CHAIR Rosewood, Ash Upholstery c. 1845-55 designed and manufactured by a Chair Maker Thursday, December 6, 12 T E R M I N O LO GY! ! ! Ogee Arch - A pointed arch composed of reversed curves, the lower concave and the upper convex Crocket - an ornament usually in the form of curved and bent foliage used on the edge of a gable or spire Finial - a crowning ornament or detail (as a decorative knob) Lancet - a pointed arch, of which the width, or span, is narrow compared with the height Tracery - architectural ornamental work with branching lines Quatrefoil - tracery or an ornament with four foils or lobes Thursday, December 6, 12 Finial Crocket Ogee Arch Quatrefoil Lancet Tracery CURULE SIDE CHAIR Ebonized Cherry, Gilding, Silk Cover, c. 1870 George Hunzinger Thursday, December 6, 12 Like so many figures in the New York furniture industry of the 1860-70s, George Hunzinger immigrated to America in 1855 at age 20. Through his long and fertile career, he was granted 21 patents for furniture innovations. This chair is perhaps his most enduring one with diagonal cross bracing on the legs to the back of the chair for strength. The patent date is impressed on the verso of the crest rail. The upholstery foundations are original to the chair; however, the show covers are new and composed of a goldtu!ed satin encased in a black, satin-rouched border. Made by his eponymous firm (1866-98) in New York City, the chair was offered with less gilding and more modest upholstery to appeal to different income levels. The modified curule base, Neo-Grec style turnings and gilded incising could be admired by the historicist; conversely, the structurally determined frame geometry, articulated joinery, standardized machine-turned components and spare efficiency of the frame are all true to the modernist canon. Thursday, December 6, 12 SLING SEAT LOUNGE CHAIR Anodized Aluminum. Rubber, Upholstery, c. 1935 designed by Warren MacArthur Jr. Thursday, December 6, 12 ADJUSTABLE LOUNGE CHAIR Laminated Birch, Brass, 1947 designed by Herbert Von Thaden Thursday, December 6, 12 Designed by Herbert von Thaden (1898-1969) Manufactured by Thaden Jordan Furniture Company (Est. 1946), Roanoke, Virginia Adjustable Lounge Chair, 1947 Laminated Birch, Brass TIMELINE!!! 1948: The Museum of Modern Art features the ‘International Competition for Low-cost Furniture Design’ Thursday, December 6, 12 MAF (MEDIUM ARM FIBERGLASS) CHAIR Fiberglass, Enameled Metal designed by George Nelson Thursday, December 6, 12 SOLID ELM BALL CHAIR, 1970 Elm Wood designed and manufactured by Jon Brooks Thursday, December 6, 12 Designed and Manufactured by Jon Brooks (b. 1944) New Boston, New Hampshire Solid Elm Ball Chair, 1970 Elm Wood TIMELINE!!! 1775: Loyalists cut down the Boston Liberty Tree, an elm tree and meeting spot for the Sons of Liberty 1960s: Post-Modernism 1970: The Dutch Elm disease kills 77 million trees by 1970 Thursday, December 6, 12 HIGH STOOL corrugated cardboard, masonite, wood, 1971 designed by Frank Gehry Thursday, December 6, 12 Designed by Frank Gehry (b. 1929) Easy Edges, Inc. (active 1969-73) Los Angeles, California High Stool, 1971 Corrugated Cardboard, Masonite, Wood TIMELINE!!! April 22, 1970: First Earth Day reflects the growing interest in recycling and environmentalism Thursday, December 6, 12 SYNERGISTIC SYNTHESIS XVII, SUB B1 CHAIR Finn Birch Laminate, Formica ColorCore, Latigo Leather, Sunbrella Acrylic, Top Grain Leather, Foam, Rubber, Steel, Maple Dowels, 2003 designed and manufactured by Kenneth Smythe Thursday, December 6, 12 Kenneth Smythe studied architecture briefly in Berkeley, California. His designs are generated from a unique and personal cosmology and are gestated over many years. Smythe was inspired by several sources: the theories of mathematician and philosopher Bertrand Russell (1872-1970); the music composed by Frederick A.T. Delius (1862-1934); and the Fibonacci numerical calculations. The designs that he creates come from the idea of creating them in a series, not each as individuals. He creates pieces that possess a consistent seat height and angle. All of Smythe’s designs are comprised of birch laminate from Finland stacked together and finished with Formica ColorCore plastic. These pieces are next held together and compressed with a threaded rod. Although appearing to be machine manufactured, the chair is designed and cra!ed by hand. Thursday, December 6, 12 APPALACHIAN BENT WILLOW ARM CHAIR willow branches, wood plank seat, hook rug seat cushion cover, c. 1890 Thursday, December 6, 12 Designed and Manufactured by a Chair Maker Southern Appalachian Mountains Region Appalachian Bent Willow Arm Chair, c. 1890 Willow Branches, Wood Plank Seat, Hook Rug Seat Cushion Cover TIMELINE!!! 1897: Francis Goodrich opens Allanstand Cra! Shop to bring a"ention to Appalachian cra!s Late 19th century: Edward Sands Frost (1843-94) of Biddeford, Maine sells hook rug designs—burlap fabric with imprinted artistic pa"erns 1933: The American Federation of the Arts publishes A Catalogue of Mountain Handcra!s Thursday, December 6, 12 LARGE DIAMOND LOUNGE CHAIR Chrome Wire Frame with Original Green Wool, c. 1952 designed by Harry Bertoia Thursday, December 6, 12 Italian born sculptor, university lecturer and furniture designer, Harry Bertoia displayed a unique stroke of genius with his patented Diamond Chair for Knoll International in 1952. Bertoia was an inventor of form and an enricher of furniture design with his introduction of a new material: he turned industrial wire rods into a design icon. Educated at Detroit Technical High School, the Detroit School of Arts and Cra!s and Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, Bertoia taught metal cra!s at Cranbrook. He worked with Charles Eames to develop his signature molded plywood chairs. Eero Saarinen commissioned him to design a metal sculptured screen for the General Motors Technical Center in Detroit. His awards include the cra!smanship medal from the American Institute of Architects, as well as AIA’s Gold Medal. Thursday, December 6, 12 1961 Playboy photo featuring le! to right — George Nelson, Edward Wormley, Eero Saarinen, Harry Bertoia, Charles Eames and Jens Risom “If you look at these chairs, you will see that they are mainly made of air, just like light sculptures… Space goes clean through them.” — Harry Bertoia BIRD LOUNGE CHAIR Chrome Wire Frame with Original Green Wool, c. 1952 designed by Harry Bertoia Thursday, December 6, 12 FANCY SIDE CHAIR Wood, Paint, Rush, Upholstery, c. 1820 Thursday, December 6, 12 WIRE SEAT SIDE CHAIR MAPLE, POLYCHROME, COTTON COVERED METAL STRAPS designed by George Hunzinger Thursday, December 6, 12 FAUX BAMBOO SIDE CHAIR Maple, Cane, c. 1880-1890 designed by Robert J. Horner Thursday, December 6, 12 The American design industry was so heavily influenced by Japanese culture towards the turn of the century that bamboo had started making appearances in almost every form of cra!s, such as wallpaper, glass, furniture and textiles. Real bamboo itself is very sturdy and abundant, but hollow. This resulted in a dilemma for R.J. Horner and Company and their desire to manufacture bamboo furniture. They solved this by creating a formulated and precise system of lathe-turned rings and joint balls on very light, hard and round pieces of maple—giving way to the “Faux Bamboo” style furniture for which they were most known. The popularity of these items grew and were placed in bedrooms, garden rooms, country homes, hobby rooms and private si"ing rooms. Thursday, December 6, 12 “MCKINLEY ARM CHAIR” Oak, Cane, Pigment and Stain, 1894-96 designed by David Wolcott Kendall Thursday, December 6, 12 Designed by David Wolco! Kendall (1851-1910) Manufactured by Phoenix Furniture Company (Founded 1870), Grand Rapids, Michigan “McKinley” Arm Chair, c. 1894-96 Oak, Cane, Pigment and Stain TIMELINE!!! 1888-89: David Wolco! Kendall develops wood-stain colors April 5, 1897: First ”American Arts and Cra"s Exhibition” opens at Copley Hall, Boston Thursday, December 6, 12 COLONIAL REVIVAL COMB-BACK WINDSOR ARM CHAIR Oak, Southern Yellow Pine, c. 1928 designed and manufactured by Virginia Craftsman, Inc Thursday, December 6, 12 JOHNSON WAX COMPANY CHAIR Enameled Steel, Original Loop Pile Upholstery, Brass designed by Frank Lloyd Wright Thursday, December 6, 12 Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) Manufactured by Steelcase Corporation Grand Rapids, Michigan Johnson Wax Company Chair, c. 1938 Enameled Steel, Original Loop Pile Upholstery, Brass TIMELINE!!! 1886 - present: S.C. Johnson Company also known as Johnson’s Wax of Racine, Wisconsin 1930-45: Art Moderne Style 1933-39: “Falling Water,” Bear Run, Pennsylvania 1937: “Taliesin West,” Sco!sdale, Arizona 1956-59: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, New York Thursday, December 6, 12 THE NAVY CHAIR, 1944 Brushed Aluminum designed by manufactured by Emeco for the U.S. Navy Thursday, December 6, 12 ACRYLIC CHAIR, 1957 Modeled Acrylic Resin, Polyester Upholstery designed by Erwine Laverne Thursday, December 6, 12 ROCKING STOOL, 1958 Walnut, Chromium Plated Steel Wire designed by Isamu Noguchi Thursday, December 6, 12 Isamu Noguchi (1904-1988) is considered one of the foremost American sculptors of the middle 20th century. In 1954, Knoll Associates debuted a rocking stool, which Noguchi had designed for them a year earlier. Available in two heights, it was patented in 1958. This example is the taller version. Though not many sold, the design was so acclaimed that in 1957, and without any involvement from the designer, the manufacturer adapted the stool design into to a dining table by substituting a broad white laminate top and a heavy flat cast iron disc as the base. That version sold well for many years. Noguchi’s former sculpture studio in Long Island City, New York is now a museum. Thursday, December 6, 12 RUSTIC TWIG BENCH Cast Iron, Black/Green Paint, c. 1855 designed and manufactured by Janes Beebe & Co. Thursday, December 6, 12 GRASSHOPPER ARM CHAIR Laminated Birch Upholstery designed by Eero Saarinen, manufactured by Knoll Associates Thursday, December 6, 12 EGYPTIAN REVIVAL SIDE CHAIR Ebonized Cherry, Lisere Rep 1865 Document Cover Designed and Manufacture Attributed to Pottier & Stymus Thursday, December 6, 12 LADDERBACK DOLL’S CHAIR Wood, Rush, Dark Green Paint with Floral Sprays Thursday, December 6, 12 SIDE CHAIR Ebonized Cherry, Gilding, Silk Lampas of Document used on Herter Seating Furniture (original foundation), c. 1880 designed by Christian Herter Thursday, December 6, 12 LADY’ RECEPTION CHAIR Natural unpainted Rattan, Hardwood, c. 1885 designed and manufactured by Wakefield Rattan Co. Thursday, December 6, 12 CHILD’S WICKER RECLINING CHAIR Natural Wicker, Printed Velvet, Brass designed and manufactured by Wakefield Rattan Co. Thursday, December 6, 12 SIDE CHAIR Mahogany, Rosewood, Inlay of Copper, Brass, Pewter and Mother-of-Pearl, Silk Lampas Cover, 1885 designed and manufactured by Hertz Brothers Thursday, December 6, 12 “SHERATON” CHAIR Screenprinted Laminate over Plywood designed by Robert Charles Venturi Thursday, December 6, 12 PIERCED TALL BACK SIDE CHAIR Ebonzied Cherry, Silk Gauffrage Velvet Cover designed and manufactured by Frederick Krutina Thursday, December 6, 12 TEXAS LONGHORN ARM CHAIR DESIGNED BY WENZEL FRIEDRICH Texas Longhorns, Ivory, Oak, Silk Satin Cover, Brass, and Louis Comfort Tiffany Glass Ball Casters, c. 1890 Thursday, December 6, 12 Designed by Wenzel Friedrich (1827-1902) Manufactured by Wenzel Friedrich (active 1880-c.1890), San Antonio, Texas Texas Longhorn Arm Chair, c. 1890 Texas Longhorns, Ivory, Oak, Silk Satin Cover, Brass and Louis Comfort Tiffany Glass Ball Casters TI M EL I N E! ! ! 1845: Texas becomes the 28th state to join Union 1867: The Chisholm Trail is used to move longhorn ca"le to market from Wichita to Abilene 1880s: Barb wire fencing closes the open range in Texas and led to the demise of longhorn and open range 1890: U.S. government declares the frontier closed 1890: Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show travels Music – 1893: Two Kentucky teachers write Happy Birthday Thursday, December 6, 12 IONIC BENCH baltic birch plywood, 2010 designed by Laurie Beckerman Thursday, December 6, 12 Designed by Laurie Beckerman (b. 1953), New York Fabricated by Heritage Woodshop (Est. 1995), Brooklyn, New York Ionic Bench, 2010 Baltic Birch Plywood Laminate The Ionic Bench is inspired by the capital of an ionic column. Instead of the look of dense stone, the lines of the form are extracted to create a light, spacious and resilient bench in which a person sits in the middle — framed on either side by two big, luxurious scrolls. The lines of the plies evoke a feeling of movement and vibrancy. Made from 1" thick Baltic Birch plywood, the bench’s profile is cut out 18 times with the use of CNC technology. The slices are laminated together for a strong, curvaceous form. The surfaces that reveal the plies are finely sanded and coated with a high-quality Italian acrylic; the result is a seat that is sensuously smooth to the touch. Beckerman, an architecture graduate of the Pra! Institute, envisioned this design as perhaps a hallway bench where boots could be stored in the curves. Not only is this bench functional, it’s beautiful proportion was inspired by the artist’s study of the golden rectangle. Thursday, December 6, 12 LCW (LOUNGE CHAIR WOOD) Molded Birch Plywood, c. 1954 designed by Charles and Ray Eames Thursday, December 6, 12 The ‘LCW’ (Lounge Chair Wood), designed by husband and wife team Charles and Ray Eames, is undoubtedly the most celebrated chair design of the 20th century. The underlying material choice actually begins with New Yorker John Henry Belter’s long-expired the long expired 1858 patent for using heat and pressure to bend laminated wood with alternating grain direction into complex curved profiles. A!er meeting at the Cranbrook Academy, Ray assisted Charles and Eero Saarinen in their molded plywood design for the Museum of Modern Art’s “Organic Furniture Competition” for which they won first place. The Eameses continued working in molded plywood with a wartime commission to supply leg splints to the military. Further refinements in their technology resulted in the Biomorphic Modernism Style LCW. The striking aesthetics of this chair, which can seem almost zoomorphic, derive from the separation of the so!ly biomorphic-shaped back (head), seat (thorax), spine and legs, appearing to float by way of the mostly unseen rubber shock mounts. The chair’s stance feels animated. Thursday, December 6, 12 ROCKING ARM CHAIR MAPLE, CLOTH TAPE, C. 1840 Thursday, December 6, 12 SLIPPER CHAIR Grape Vine, Oak Leaf, Carved and Laminated Rosewood, Caster, Silk Damask Cover, c. 1855 designed and manufactured by John Henry Belter Thursday, December 6, 12 In the late 18th century, enlightened Americans like Thomas Jefferson admired the fashion, culture, and arts of our revolutionary war ally, France. With the return to power of Napoleon III’s second empire in the mid-19th century, interest was revived in the Rococo style of France’s ‘Ancien Regime’. A German immigrant, John Henry Belter, used technological innovations in the creation of his chairs which manifested in a number of forward looking patents. On July 31, 1847, Belter patented a type of jigsaw that efficiently cut the elaborate pierced back. He then followed with a patent on February 23, 1858, that detailed a method for bending laminated wood in multiple directions into a continuous rail and stile for pleasing aesthetics and added strength. This innovative process was employed 100 years later in the modernist chair designs of Charles and Ray Eames’ LCW, c. 1954. Rococo Revival motifs are represented by realistically carved floral and foliate bundles at the back, crest, undulating apron front, and on the delicate front cabriole legs integrated with the bold pierced silhoue#e of intertwined volute scrolls. The low seat height made it easier for women during the 19th century to put on stockings and slippers, in addition to other a#ire which included fashionable camisoles, pe#icoats, laced corsets and full-skirted dresses. The blue silk damask fabric cover is similar to that which is used in an example at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Thursday, December 6, 12 CENTRIPETAL ARM CHAIR Cast Iron, Wood, Sheet Metal, Gauffrage Velvet Cover, Faux Rosewood Cover, c. 1850 Thursday, December 6, 12 Designed by Thomas E. Warren (active with American Chair Co. 1849-52) Manufactured by the American Chair Co., Troy, New York (1829-1858) Centripetal Spring Arm Chair, c. 1850 Cast Iron, Wood, Sheet Metal, Gauffrage Velvet Cover, Faux Rosewood Graining T I MEL I N E!!! 1820-40s: Railroads blossom and link towns; by 1840, 3,000 miles of tracks; then by 1890, 164,000 total miles; U.S. time zones created to coordinate railroad timetables 1840-70: Rococo Revival Movement Music – 1851: Old Folks at Home Music – 1855: Old Lang Syne 1857: The steel coil spring is first patented for use in a chair seat 1858: W.S. Thomson patents steel cage ladies crinoline in the U.S. Thursday, December 6, 12 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES CHAMBER ARM CHAIR designed by Thomas Ustick Walter, c. 1857 Thursday, December 6, 12 Designed by Thomas Ustick Walter (1804-1887) Manufactured by Hammi! Desk Manufacturing Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania House of Representatives Chamber Arm Chair, 1857 TIMELINE!!! 1860-1880: American Second Empire Style Music – 1861-2: Ba!le Hymn of the Republic 1851: Walter is appointed Architect of the Capitol June 11 1857-1859: The 35th Congress, composed of 237 Representatives and 7 Delegates, meets 1863: Ma!hew Brady Studio photographs President Lincoln in a House of Representatives Chamber Arm Chair 1861-1865: Civil War fought 1863: Lincoln issues Emancipation Proclamation Thursday, December 6, 12 SUPERLIGHT, 2004 Brushed Aluminum designed by Frank Gehry, Manufactured by Emeco Thursday, December 6, 12 CURRENT, 2004 Steel, Auto Paint designed by manufactured by Vivian Beer Thursday, December 6, 12 OXBOW ARM CHAIR, 1903 Oak, Original Green Leather, Hand-wrought Copper designed by David Robertson Smith Thursday, December 6, 12 Designed by David Robertson Smith Manufactured by Stickley Brothers (Albert and John George) (1891- c. 1932), Grand Rapids, Michigan Oxbow Arm Chair, c. 1903 Oak, Original Green Leather, Hand-wrought Copper TIMELINE!!! 1900-25: American Arts and Cra!s Movement 1900: Jazz developed in New Orleans 1900: U.S. population 76 million, more than 4,000 millionaires 1901: Gustav Stickley publishes Cra!sman Magazine 1903: Wright Brothers fly the first successful airplane Thursday, December 6, 12 PLANK-BACK CHAIR Fumed Oak, Leather, Brass, c. 1905 designed by Charles P. Limpert Company Thursday, December 6, 12 The intellectual underpinnings of the Arts and Cra!s Movement came from the 19th century reformers John Ruskin (1819-1908) and William Morris (1834-1896). In the early 20th century, it was brought into the arena of design as a reaction against the late Victorian era, and moved towards a focus on morality and domestic life. Stickley Brothers, Roycro!ers, Joseph McHugh and Charles Limbert used much of the language that describes the Arts and Cra!s Movement in advertising copy. Considered to be part of Limbert’s “Dutch Arts and Cra!s” line of 1902, this design employs unique synthesis of styles used in the Glasgow school and Weiner Werksta"e. An example of this rare design has surfaced bearing the original paper label of the firm indicating a manufacture date of 190205. Thursday, December 6, 12 GRASSHOPPER ARM CHAIR designed by Eeron Saarinen Thursday, December 6, 12 MOLDED FIBERGLASS CHAIR Molded Fiberglass, Iron, c. 1950 designed by Greta Magnusson Grossman Thursday, December 6, 12