Armchair no 03 by J.J.P. Oud

I’ve featured this chair earlier, but below writeup by the German museum sheds some more light on the provenance of this chair.

JJ Pieter Oud, armchair 03, 1933
The new collection – Museum of Applied Arts, Munich

Dutch architect and designer Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud was co-founder of the influential De Stijl group and Rotterdam’s city architect. Oud was not only one of the most important pioneers of modernism and functionalism in the Netherlands, but also received great international recognition.

In the early 1930s, the progressive department store Metz & Co in Amsterdam commissioned artists and architects – including J.J.P. Oud – with the design of modern furniture. Oud’s first four designs were presented in a small exhibition entitled “Het stalen meubel 1934” that opened in December 1933 in the department store’s new domed hall, designed by Gerrit Thomas Rietveld. Up to now Oud had only designed furniture for the clients of his respective buildings, but these tubular steel chairs are his first series-produced furniture. As avant-garde and modern as this first small collection from Metz was, the sales that could be achieved were just as small. But at least Metz managed to attract international attention – Philip Johnson, then curator at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, suggested the production of tubular steel furniture Ouds in America, which was just as unsuccessful as the acquisition of a copy by MOMA .

Model 03, intended as an office chair, impresses with its unusual construction of the cross-shaped chair legs. With his designs for tubular steel furniture, Oud was not only concerned with creating modern and comfortable furniture, but also furniture that, as room-constituting elements, represented an equivalent to the rooms of the New Building.

Due to the small number of editions, the tubular steel chairs by Oud for Metz are among the extremely rare examples of Dutch modernism. As late as 1990, page 98 of the exhibition catalog of the Boijman’s-van Beuningen Museum in Rotterdam states: “… Of all these variants, nothing has survived except for a few old photos and the drawings that have been preserved.”

dr Joseph Strasser

Illustration:

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1890-1963), Armchair 03, 1933. Manufacturer: Metz & Co, Amsterdam. Chrome-plated tubular steel, white leather. H 70 cm, W 53 cm, D 68.6 cm.

© The new collection – Museum for Applied Arts, Munich

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Chairs!
gje

Armchair no 04 by J.J.P. Oud

When I saw this photo I thought I’ve featured this chair earlier and that is correct. Easier to find, because correctly tagged as a J.J.P. Oud Chair, but also because it appears as a reading suggestion below this post. The Rotterdam Museum of Modern Art acquired this chair in 2010..and since the previous post I know from whom: Ad Van den Bruinhorst sold the chair to the museum. The Chair was designed for Metz and Co in Amsterdam/The Hague

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Chairs!
gje

Set of Six Armchairs no 181 by Mobile Sighet


Set of Six Armchairs no 181 by Mobile Sighet Romania ca 1930. Sold at Wright for $5,625 in March 2022

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Chairs!
gje

Ge460 Butterfly Armchair by Hans J. Wegner

Ge460 Butterfly Armchair by Hans J. Wegner for Getama

The GE460 “Butterfly” is designed by Hans J. Wegner. The chair “Butterfly” is like a butterfly that is ready to put off.

It was created and shown for the first time in 1977, but was designed in terms of its time.

The design is sculptural with a clear division into the load -bearing – the massive frame – and the borne – shells.

“Butterfly” is especially suitable as a freestanding chair, but with its parallel sides can also be placed on straight rows.

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Chairs!
gje

Armchair by Paul Schuitema


1930 Paul Schuitema Tubular Armchair for Fana Metal Holland. Via 1stDibs

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Chairs!
gje