Armchairs by Paul Tuttle

Paul-Tuttle-Chair

Armchairs by Paul Tuttle

Armchairs by Paul Tuttle, clipped from the web some time ago. Afraid I don’t know where.

Selling out Chandigarh (01) – Introduction

Selling out Chandigarh (01)-Introduction

On March, 31, 2011, I was witnessing a Sale by Wright in Chicago online in real time. I saw many Chandigarh items of furniture from Le Corbusier (Chosen name for Charles Edouard Jaenneret) and his cousin Pierre Jeanneret, labeled “Chandigarh”, but couldn’t place Chandigarh until I stumbled on an article in the Design Observer.

The Background

India and Pakistan were split up in 1947 and India lost Lahore, the capital of the Punjab, to Pakistan.

Jawaharlal Nehru, the first prime minister of India, commissioned Le Corbusier (Charles Edouard Jeanneret) to build an entirely new city “free from the fetters of the past.” which became Chandigarh. Le Corbusier commissioned his cousin Pierre Jeanneret for interior design and he designed thousands of pieces of furniture for the government buildings and private residences of Chandigarh.

Some inhabitants of the city are not over enthusiastic with the design, because concrete and the Indian heat didn’t fit well together.

Chandigarh seems unattended and not well kept. Between 1999 and 2008 Indian officials have simply thrown out as garbage or sold via local auctions many pieces of the original furniture.

It appears that many pieces were collected by the Frenchman Eric Touchaleaume.
He wrote a book about this Indian Adventure. Auctionhouses gladly refer to this book as proof of the provenance…
Earlier he had retrieved Jean Prouvé furniture from Congo Brazaville. Read this interesting interview with him in the Guardian in February 2008.

The Controversy

The furniture pieces are sold through various auction houses all over the world for exorbitant prices.

For instance Phillis De Pury: April 7, 2010 Sale from Lot 83: The 4 cross armchairs were SOLD AT £67,250 while the ESTIMATE was £30,000-45,000…

It is clear that with such prices a controversy is born: Are the auction houses accessory to looting or merely doing their job? The same sort of controversy that occurs when a ship sunken a long time ago, is recovered and the cargo (for instance precious china) is auctioned.

We at Chair Blog don’t want to take a position for or against, but simply register what is happening.

Now it is time to publish this post as end of March 2012 again there are many pieces at an auction. This time Wright.

See also:

From time to time we will report more on the subject.

There’s no ‘I’ in Bamboo by Tom Higgs

There's no 'I' in Bamboo by Tom Higgs

There’s no ‘I’ in Bamboo

By Tom Higgs.

Materials experiment that developed into a new construction technique in bamboo. Strips of bamboo (the largest machinable section from raw bamboo) are channeled and glued into I-beams these can then be cut and glued or riveted together to make strong, lightweight furniture structures.

For all its environmental benefits, bamboo’s only apparent weakness it would seem is the limit of the materials dimensions when machined. Because of bamboo’s hollow structure only thin strips can be cut from the poles. This project proposes to use these strips in a different way.

Bamboo is currently made into panels and blocks by butt-jointing and laminating rectangular bamboo strips together. Instead, by using these strips to create I-beams, rigid lightweight structures suitable for furniture can be achieved. This chair requires no expensive tooling, just a few basic jigs with processes minimized by repeating angles throughout the structure. This chair is strong, lightweight, sustainable and promotes the use of bamboo in new ways.

Red Chair by Gaetano Pesce

Red Chair by Gaetano Pesce

Red Chair by Gaetano Pesce

Via vialineaverde:

Gaetano Pesce, 2002

Safari chair by Kaare Klint

Safari chair by Kaare Klint
pynter:

Safari chair by Kaare Klint from Denmark.