Lutyens Bench

Thakeham-bench-6-ft
On another tack: The Lutyens Bench. Everybody will immediately recognize this bench as The Lutyens Bench. Actually it is called the Thakeham Bench.

A granddaughter of Sir Edwin Landseer Lutyens (1869-1944), Candia Lutyens, started Lutyens Furniture Limited in the UK

She writes about Lutyens:

Edwin Lutyens is often described as the greatest British architect of his age. …
.. That Lutyens was a designer of furniture is not well known. His designs, though numerous, were always produced in small quantities and for a specific effect that was always a complement to the whole. Sadly, almost no Lutyens’s interiors survive intact and many pieces of furniture have been lost. Thus it is that Lutyens’ furniture has never become part of the general consciousness, although on the merits of the designs alone it should rank with, and take its natural place alongside the furniture of all the ‘Twentieth Century Greats’. As with his architecture, Lutyens in his furniture designs makes specific reference to, and is influenced by, the substance and course of the great English tradition of furniture making.
Similarly too, the form, the style and the synergy all bear the stamp of his own individuality. Precise and intricate mathematical details lend an element of surprise and Lutyens’ well-renowned love of jokes and ‘visual puns’ is self-evident in many of the tricks he employs. The result is, like many of his buildings, absolutely controlled yet somehow astonishing – at first sight conventional, yet encompassing at a second glance both the whimsical and the paradoxical. In making Lutyens’ furniture to his own drawings, the task of Lutyens Furniture Limited was both unique and daunting in its application. Our responsibility to the designs dictated that our prime and overriding principle is that the quality of what we produce should be as high as is possible to achieve. We therefore go to considerable lengths to employ the best craftsmanship that is available, in using traditional methods of construction and upholstery, and to comply with Lutyens’ own tastes in terms of materials and timbers. As a result, we have total confidence that these pieces will continue for generations as furniture always used to and as it should.

Candia Lutyens via Lutyens Furniture Limited.

About the Thakeham Bench Candia writes:

The Thakeham seat pictured here in English Oak was designed for the garden at Little Thakeham near Storrington, West Sussex. The rhythmical symmetry of the bench is typical of Lutyens’s love of form. The bench has become an archetypal design in its own right and has sadly, for many, lost its association with Lutyens. It is made all over the world to varying degress of quality (absense thereof). There are no makers of this bench other than LFL that are authorised by the Lutyens family.

I believe it is a bit like aspirin. Aspirin originally was a brand name for a pill Bayer developed. Later on aspirin became a name for anti headache pills in it’s own right, whereupon Bayer lost its intellectual property rights.

Roorkhee Chair by Lewis Drake – British Campaign Furniture

Roorkhee Chair by British Campaign Furniture

Roorkhee Chair in Canvas by British Campaign Furniture.

A fine piece of sturdy design. I bet the famous director’s chair doesn’t match it.

This is our finest reproduction of the legendary campaign chair named in honor of the headquarters of the Indian Army Corps of Engineers stationed at Roorkhee, United Provinces, India, and used by British military officers from the 1890’s up to the beginning of World War II.

The army needed a chair that was light in weight, highly portable, exceptionally strong, and very comfortable. In addition it had to be perfectly stable no matter how uneven and rough the terrain. This was achieved by constructing the chair from a series of turned teak wood parts which were fitted into each other loosely and were not glued, being held together by a combination of leather straps and leather or canvas seat and back. When someone sits in the chair, the straps, arms, seat, and back all act under tension to keep the whole structure in place while, at the same time, allowing it to adjust to uneven ground and remain perfectly stable (actually, the heavier the occupant the more stable the chair becomes). All this in a chair that can be assembled or disassembled in a matter of seconds and transported in a compact package 8″dia.x 30″ long.

The excellence of the Roorkhee chair’s simple, functional design has never been improved upon and it has influenced many of our greatest modern architects and furniture designers. Lewis Drake is proud to carry on the tradition in our exquisitely detailed reproduction entirely hand made of the finest rosewood solids with seats and backs in your choice of heavy leather-trimmed canvas or 100% top grain buffalo hide all in a quality better than the originals. Overall a strong, functional, workhorse of a chair, impervious to weather, virtually indestructible, and entirely suitable for the finest room in your home or apartment, a weekend tailgating party, your deer camp in the mountains, or the rain forests of Malaysia. The beautiful heavy canvas carrying bag is included in the price.

via British Campaign Furniture.

Cantilever Chair by Mart Stam at Retro Vegas

Mart Stam Cantilever Chair at Vegas Retro

Retro Vegas seems to have a nice original Mart Stam cantilever chair.

This reminds me of a prior post: The Cantilever Chair: By Mart Stam, by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe or by Marcel Breuer?

A Royal Throne by the Horrix Brothers – Meubelenfabriek Anna Palowna

Horrix Throne King William III NL

Two brothers, Matthieu (1815-1889) and Willem Horrix (1816-1881) started to build their furniture manufacturing company, Meubelenfabriek Anna Palowna, in The Hague, The Netherlands, in 1850. The company was closed in 1890 after Matthieu died. Matthieu was the designer of the two. They had their training in the family business and in Paris. One of their famous chairs, a royal throne used at the coronation of William III as King of The Netherlands belongs to the collection of the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.

Horrix

I found this Horrix sofa photo somewhere on the Internet. Ah I now see the photo is probably from the The Hague Notary Public Auction House (Venduhuis der Notarissen) where two of these canapes were sold for Euro 800.- and Euro 900.- respectively in May 2007.

Two Horrix chairs can be found in the Delft Technical University Chair Collection (Architecture School TU Delft) .

Second Hand Barcelona Chair – If only Ludwig knew

Second-Hand-Barcelona-Chair-IMG_1363

Sunday, strolling over the The Hague open air antique fair, I noticed this dark red Barcelona Chair with ottoman.. If only Ludwig knew…

Second-Hand-Barcelona-Chair-IMG_1364A

Currently it is so hot that the trees are losing their leaves due to heat stress as if it is autumn.

Second-Hand-Barcelona-Chair-IMG_1367

To me the back looks as if it is an original one, but I’m not sure.

Does the little Persian rug detonate or not? I believe it does and you?