Marshmallow Sofa by George Nelson – 2012 IMM Cologne (13)
Glad to be able to share my own photo of this colorful famous sofa with you. I found it at the Doshi Levien curated booth at 2012 IMM Cologne.
Chairs, Chair Design and Chair Designers
Glad to be able to share my own photo of this colorful famous sofa with you. I found it at the Doshi Levien curated booth at 2012 IMM Cologne.
Slab Settee by George Nakashima
‘Slab’ settee, c. 1970
Walnut, hickory. 81.9 x 167 x 58.4 cm. (32 1/4 x 65 3/4 x 23 in.) Underside signed in pencil with ‘Skriloff’.
ESTIMATE £10,000-12,000Not sold
PROVENANCE Skriloff Family, USA
LITERATURE Mira Nakashima, Nature, Form & Spirit: The Life and Legacy of George Nakashima, New York, 2003, pp. 147 and 223 for similar examples
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.
Found this photo somewhere on the Internet and had to share this Batllo Bench by Antoni Gaudi with you, especially as a bit of counter balance for this Gaudi Inspired Chair by Bram Geenen.
The Brussels Atomium has a Marshmallow Sofa by George Nelson in a special edition by Vitra. The photo that featured it here was on the Atomium site but has disappeared since posting. Therefor I have replaced it with my own photo of an all white one.
Update and I found the original photo back. So now we have two photos here.
Last edited by gje on March 14, 2011 at 11:09 AM