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Danish Chairs

AUTHOR: Noritsugu Oda
ISBN: 0811822575

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         Editorial Review

Danish Chairs
- Book Review,
by Noritsugu Oda


From Library Journal
Chairs are often considered especially revealing of a designer's skill because of the strict limits placed on their design by the demands of the human body. Danish Chairs is a comprehensive examination of dozens of chairs from the first three-quarters of this century. Each chair is illustrated with multiple photographs and sometimes by line drawings as well. In addition, biographical information is supplied for the designers listed. Although there is a short introductory essay on Danish furniture design and brief notes on each designer and their chairs, Japanese art professor Oda's emphasis is visual, and so it is a pity that the elegant book design suffers from the graininess of the photos. Sitting on the Edge has a wider geographic range and includes some other furniture, but it is basically a look at how designers responded to 20th-century architecture through chair design. Published as an exhibition catalog, it uses colorful illustrations to depict both individual items and complete rooms in the home of the collecting couple, Michael and Gabrielle Boyd. A number of short essays by distinguished curator-authors discuss the role of design in modern life and explore the chair as an exemplar of design. Visually exciting, with good-quality printing, the volume is flawed only by unreadable chapter introductions printed over unseeable historical photos. Danish Chairs, as an intensive examination of a more limited area, will be of most interest to art and design libraries, while Sitting on the Edge will appeal to a broader spectrum of libraries.ADavid McClelland, Philadelphia Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.


The New York Times
How has Danish design remained so dependably original over the last century? A new book, Danish Chairs, by Noritsugu Oda, shows how the simplest things can bare the soul of a whole culture. The book's preface explains how Danish designers have worked to simplify life by building comfortable, useful, beautiful and affordable items. The Danish chairs are photographed on four sides like pure sculpture, which will be enough to make Arne Jacobson fans swoon. The Metropolitan chair was conceived 40 years ago by two craftsman, Aksel Bender Madson and Ejner Larsen, but its complex curves are newly fashionable. Although many of the 200 designs in the book are no longer made, reproductions and descendants live on.


Modernism Magazine
The greatest revelation of Danish Chairs (Chronicle) by Noritsugu Oda is that Arne Jacobsen and Hans Wegner were only the tip of the iceberg. Great Danes in chair design were many and this book includes unfamiliar names like Helge Vestergaard Jensen, designer of an extraordinary 1955 nylon-cord "racket" chair, and Edvard and Tove Kindt-Larsen, prolific in Denmark from the 1930's through '50's, but unknown in the U.S.; variants on familiar designs, like Poul Kjaerhom's esay chair of 1971, a wooden-legged version of this more common steel-and-leather designs; and rarely-seen pieces by well-known designers such as Finn Juhl's extravagantly shaped pelican chair of 1940. A preface by Takako Murakami, elegantly translated from the Japanese, goes a long way toward explaining how the Japanese bring such a fresh and clear eye to the subject of chairs. Their fascination with the Western furniture form seem only natural when one considers that the chair made its appearance in Japan only forty years ago. Oda, a professor of arts and crafts at Hokkaido University, documents the spare perfection of Danish chair design from the early twentieth century to the present decade in uniformly lit. 360-degree views of some 200 chairs, accompanied by the author's schematic line drawings. Why the Danes? Denmark in the twentieth century possessed all the necessary conditions for the development of excellence in furniture design, argues Murakami: "a far-reaching understanding of traditional woodworking and modern engineering techniques, the presence of highly trained craftspeople...the unparalleled creativity of its designers and their recognition of consumer's needs and desires." On perusing Danish Chairs, we can only marvel at a small nation's consistency in producing cultural artifacts of such exceptional craftmanship, beauty, and utility.


Flaunt
Denmark has long led the way in twentieth-century furniture design, producing beautiful pieces distinguished by excellent craftsmanship. Danish innovations with the chair, in particular, represent many highly pleasing accords between function, comfort and style. The book Danish Chairs gathers together more than 200 premier examples of twentieth-century Danish chair design, offering along the way a wealth of inspiration for designers, decorators and architects. The featured designers include Arne Jacobsen, well known for his Ant and Egg Chairs; Hans J. Wegner, designer of some 200 chairs, including the Peacock and Ox; and Finn Juhl, best known for his Chieftain Chair.


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         Book Review

Danish Chairs
- Book Reviews,
by Noritsugu Oda

Danish Chairs

FROM THE CRITICS

Library Journal

Chairs are often considered especially revealing of a designer's skill because of the strict limits placed on their design by the demands of the human body. Danish Chairs is a comprehensive examination of dozens of chairs from the first three-quarters of this century. Each chair is illustrated with multiple photographs and sometimes by line drawings as well. In addition, biographical information is supplied for the designers listed. Although there is a short introductory essay on Danish furniture design and brief notes on each designer and their chairs, Japanese art professor Oda's emphasis is visual, and so it is a pity that the elegant book design suffers from the graininess of the photos. Sitting on the Edge has a wider geographic range and includes some other furniture, but it is basically a look at how designers responded to 20th-century architecture through chair design. Published as an exhibition catalog, it uses colorful illustrations to depict both individual items and complete rooms in the home of the collecting couple, Michael and Gabrielle Boyd. A number of short essays by distinguished curator-authors discuss the role of design in modern life and explore the chair as an exemplar of design. Visually exciting, with good-quality printing, the volume is flawed only by unreadable chapter introductions printed over unseeable historical photos. Danish Chairs, as an intensive examination of a more limited area, will be of most interest to art and design libraries, while Sitting on the Edge will appeal to a broader spectrum of libraries.--David McClelland, Philadelphia Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Booknews

Describes and illustrates over 200 designs, including pieces by Arne Jacobsen and Hans J. Wegner. Black-and-white photographs show the chairs from all four sides, often with insets of detail such as the joining; the text states the designer, materials, dimensions, manufacturer, and miscellaneous information. The treatment was first published by Korinsha Press, Tokyo, in 1996. No bibliography. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.


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