Articulated Skeleton on a Thonet Bentwood Chair

Portrait of an articulated skeleton on a Thonet bentwood chair
I was just searching the Commons on Flickr and saw this chair photo of ca 1900 from the collection of the Powerhouse Museum. Couldn’t wait till Halloween to share it with you:-)

Via Portrait of an articulated skeleton on a bentwood chair.

The Powerhouse Museum, located in Sidney says:

This collection of glass plate negatives was acquired by the Museum in the 1980s and appears to have been made by a Sydney based photographic studio from around 1880 through to 1920. The images are on both whole and half plate negatives and many of the larger images are of a high quality.

Isis Folding Chair by Jake Phipps

ISIS-by-Jake-Phipps
Isis-by-Jake-Phipps-2
Jake Phipps set up his London based design studio five years ago. His Isis – reportedly the thinnest – folding chair is now being manufactured by Gebruder Thonet of Vienna. Currently a Poltrona Frau subsidiary.

via Modenus blog.

Thonet no 14 or 214 X 214

Thonet no 14 or 214 X 214 1
Thonet no 14 or 214 X 214 2
Thonet no 14 or 214 X 214 3
Thonet no 14 or 214 X 214 4
Thonet no 14 or 214 X 214 5
Thonet no 14 or 214 X 214 6

This is our post number 2,500. We’ve worked hard to reach this number before the 4th anniversary of this blog and I want to make the circle round. My chair fascination started with my fascination for the Thonet story, because I am mesmerized by the sheer size the company reached in its hey days around 1900, because of their influence on chair design and the fact that the story still evolves over several countries and continents and, last but not least, the fact Thonet made a chair affordable for everybody, which was not possible before they played their part in the industrial revolution: They truly democratized the chair.

The German branch celebrated the 150ieth birthday of their 214 model (they renamed the original number 14 into number 214) with a photo competition some time ago. Here my ranking of the first 6 of the photos they published.

Via Thonet 214 X 214 and the Galery

Lounge Chair B306 by Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret and Charlotte Perriand

Lounge Chair B306 by Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret and Charlotte
Lounge Chair B306 by Le Corbusier (Charles Edouard Jeanneret), his cousin Pierre Jeanneret and Charlotte Perriand

Estimate Euro 50,000 – 70,000 ($70,367 – $98,514)
Price Realized Euro 121,000 ($171,807)

Sale 1000, Les Collections du Chateau de Gourdon, 29 – 31 March 2011, Paris, France

An adjustable ‘B306’ chaise longue, with chromed tubular steel frame and black-painted pressed and folded steel platform, by Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret and Charlotte Perriand, with woven-wool textile seat covering, produced by Thonet Frères, Paris, 1930.

Illustrating Le Corbusier’s conviction that furnishings should be ‘machines for living’, the chaise was one of several influential designs conceived 1928-1929 by Le Corbusier, his cousin Pierre Jeanneret, and Charlotte Perriand. The present example is an early version, dating to around early 1930 when the design was first retailed, as evidenced by the raised rear support legs which conform to the April 1929 patent drawings accepted by Thonet. Shortly after serial manufacture commenced, the rear legs were reduced in height to correspond to those at the front. An apparently identical example, also with raised rear legs and hand-woven textile covering, is in the collection of the Vitra Design Museum, Weil-am-Rhein, Germany. An example of the revised design, with all legs of equal height, was presented by Charlotte Perriand at the UAM exhibition of July 1930.

via Christie’s.

Amber Chair by Jaeuk Jung

Amber Chair by Jaeuk Jung (Chairchez La Femme)
Amber Chair by Jaeuk Jung
Amber Chair by Jaeuk Jung, or the Thonet no. 14 in resin.

Via Design Boom.