Eames Chair Lovers should head over to Wright (1)

Billy Wilder Chaise by Charles and Ray Eames at Wright

preproduction model of the LCW Low Chair by Charles and Ray Eames at Wright

DKW “Bikini” Chair by Charles and Ray Eames at Wright

Eames Chair Lovers should head over Chicago based auction house Wright for the April 8, 2010 dedicated Eames Auction. It seems they have Charles and Ray Eames complete chair portfolio on sale. I’ll highlight some of them in 3 posts.

Adolf Loos Armchair for Café Capua

Currently this Armchair designed by Adolf Loos for Café Capua and manufactured by Thonet is for sale at a Dorotheum auction in Vienna, scheduled for March 15. Estimate € 1.200,- to € 1.500,- .

Rare Dining Chair by Charles Rohlfs

Rare Dining Chair by Charles Rohlfs

According to the Weekly Wright-Up blog by the curator of the Martin House Restoration Corporation – a house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright- this is a very rare Charles Rohlfs chair.

Rene Herbst Sandows Chaise

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Sandows-by-René-Herbst-P1050245

Rene-Herbst--Sandow-or-Bungee-Chair-P1050246

In September I visited Paris and L’Arche in La Defence. I took the lift to the top floor of L’Arche which has a museum of communication. There I found several chairs to enable viewing various tromp l’oeils. I didn’t know their provenance until I bought the book 100 masterpieces of the Vitra Design museum in Vienna at Prodomo Windows. From that excellent catalog I learned these chairs are most likely variations on the original Sandows Chaise designed by Rene Herbst.

About Rene Herbst

Born in Paris in 1891, René Herbst studied architecture in London and Frankfurt from 1908. After finishing his studies, he traveled extensively in Russia and Italy. In 1919 he started working as a furniture designer and interior decorator in Paris. He founded Etablissements René Herbst to produce the pieces he designed.

In 1925 René Herbst designed several exhibition stalls for the Paris “Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes”.

In 1927 René Herbst designed the revolutionary and functional “Chaise Sandows” seat furniture. The frames were nickel-plated tubular steel, the seat and back was made of rubber strips stretched taut and fastened to the frame by hooks at the end.

René Herbst first showed his “Chaise Sandows” at the 1929 Salon d’Automne, where Le Corbusier also presented furniture with tubular steel frames.

In 1930 René Herbst joined Robert Mallet-Stevens, Francis Jourdain, and others in founding the Union des Artistes Modernes (UAM); a large group of artists and designers committed to Modernism joined the co-founders. The UAM was founded as a countermovement to Art déco, which the UAM artists repudiated because they found it overloaded with decoration and too ornamental. In 1945 René Herbst was elected chairman of the UAM. The UAM organized exhibitions in Paris under the heading of “Les Formes Utiles” (Utilitarian Forms).

cited from René Herbst.com

Sandows is French for the rubber strips or bungees that form the seating and back of the chair.

Sandow Chair

Recently, at a Paris auction of Christie’s this Sandows Chair that reportedly belonged to Rene Herbst own collection was sold for € 4,375.

Hoffmann’s Sitzmachine in Black and White

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At Prodomo (Prodomo Wien which now forwards to Prodomo Windows) in the Naglergasse in Vienna I found this – dramatically modern – while in black and white – lounge chair annex recliner, the Sitzmachine that Josef Hoffmann designed over 100 years ago.