Rietveld Zig Zag Variation 2 – New Ladder Back by Garry Knox Bennett

Rietveld Zig Zag Variation 2 - New Ladder Back by Garry Knox Bennett

Rietveld Zig Zag Variation 2 – New Ladder Back by Garry Knox Bennett

Garry:

In an interview with Stefano Catalani (SC) Garry (GBK) explains:

SC: Did you build all the Zigzag chairs? Or are some of them Garry Knox Bennett’s “readymades”?

GKB: I think any original Rietveld chair would be a pretty expensive proposition. I don’t even know anybody who’s manufacturing them. But it’s a very easy chair to construct. It’s unbelievably simple.

SC: A lot of dovetail joints…

GKB: Yeah, but I modified it. I think in most cases, my engineering is better… I mean, they put dovetails in that real hard angle; I don’t even know who could make that dovetail. But they did, and they support it with gussets. I never saw a real Rietveld, but in all the pictures I saw, they had nuts and bolts in them, or they had these gussets stuck in them or battens. Instead of dovetails I used a spline joint: I set up a jig for the table saw, and sawed through the wood. I think there’s anywhere from twelve to maybe fifteen splines across. Then I milled down a piece of wood that fits in that slot, glued it in there really good, then sanded it all down even.

SC: What kind of wood did you use for your Zigzag chairs?

GKB: Any wood that was available. The wood wasn’t important.

SC: Rietveld’s Zig-Zag chair design is a stark and minimal assertion of function and form: four planes in space, four straight lines in profile. Did you fall in love with its lines?

GKB: It’s such a simple form that it allows itself a lot of manipulation. It’s an easy form to build off visually and physically: color, or what you can stick on it, like the wings or the ladder, or the Mackintosh high back. If you want, make it into an armchair!

SC: The first two Zigzag chairs you made are Old Ladderback and New Ladderback —

GKB: Right, the Shaker Ladderback.

SC: You started off with the classic Shaker craftsman style, one of the earliest and most popular American designs —

GKB: I just didn’t want to make a Rietveld chair. I was going to do something with it.

And everything just happened from that.

Rietveld Zig Zag Variation 1 – Old Ladder Back by Garry Knox Bennett

Rietveld Zig Zag Variation 1 - Old Ladder Back by Garry Knox BennettRietveld Zig Zag Variation 1 – Old Ladder Back by Garry Knox Bennett

I found Garry Knox Bennett‘s Gallery of Chairs. He likes to create series of chairs. Gerrit Rietveld has inspired Garry to a series of Zig Zag variations. I really like all of them. Rather than creating one very lengthy post, I’ll feature each variation separately. I do apologize for mixing up the sequence…because the original sequence is not entirely clear from GKB’s site:-)

In an interview by Stefano Catalani (SC) Garry (GKB) explains the inspiration the Zig Zag has given him:

SC: You started with the Zigzag chairs. You made sixteen chairs drawing inspiration from the design of Gerrit Rietveld’s 1934 Zig-Zag Chair . It’s a quite spartan chair in its original concept. What captured your interest about this model?

GKB: I’ve always looked at that chair as kind of a joke. I thought, “What a dumb chair this is!” And when I made the first, the ladder-back chair, which started out as kind of tongue-in-cheek, I sat in it, and it was a surprisingly comfortable little chair! I mean it works really well. You can get your feet behind it, when you tuck your feet under yourself; there’s no stretcher that gets in the way. It’s a good height: 18 inches, pretty standard. And it’s got some spring to it; it’s got a little limber to it. So then I have to admit, I actually fell in love with the model. From then on, I was fairly serious. Obviously I’m using puns in a lot of the titles, or a lot of visuals, but I got pretty serious about it.

After all various Dutch museums have declared 2010 to be the Rietveld Year and they will have several Rietveld designs on display. In addition, if Gerrit Rietveld would have been alive now and would have lived in the US, he might as well be known as Garry Reitveld, because Garry’s webmaster consequntly mis spelled Rietveld’s name:-)

Secretly I do hope one of the Dutch museums sees fit to get this Zig Zag collection on display for the Rietveld year.

Rocking “Wheel” Chair by Marvin Drandell

Rocking Wheel Chair by Marvin Drandell
Sam Kaufman Gallery has this Rocking “Wheel” Chair by Marvin Drandell for sale at 1stdibs.

Marvin Drandell is a Los Angeles-based designer and maker of bespoke furniture. Trained as a scientist, Drandell treats each new project as a technical exploration.

This chair, one of Drandell’s earliest projects from the early 90ies, is a rocking chair which uses the curvature of a pair of bicycle wheels as pivot points, the extent of the resulting movement limited by the shock-absorbers at the rear of the piece. (It is also fitted with short, aluminum “legs” which convert it into a stationary chair; these are removable to allow the chair to rock freely.) The seat and back are fashioned from the foam cores used to make surfboards, the carved contours carefully fiberglassed.

Price $2,500

Bench by Andrea Branzi


Bench by Andrea Branzi

Lot 79 Bench, 2008

Painted MDF, natural birch, truncated logs. 88 x 180 x 60 cm (34 5/8 x 70 7/8 x 23 5/8 in) Produced for Galleria Clio Calvi Rudy Volpi, Italy. From the “Domestic Animals” series. Number one from the edition of eight. Underside signed in marker with “Andrea Branzi 1 / “.

ESTIMATE £8,000-12,000

not sold.

Via Phillips de Pury.

Banquette by Maria Pergay


Banquette by Maria Pergay

Lot 71

Banquette, c. 1968

Brushed steel, suede. 38 x 300 x 100 cm (15 x 118 x 39 3/8 in) Produced by Design Steel, France.

ESTIMATE £60,000-80,000

via Phillips de Pury & Company.