From March 22 to June 10, 2007, The Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts, Design, and Culture is presenting Bruno Mathsson: Architect and Designer , the first exhibition in the United States to examine the work of this leading figure of Swedish modernism. Mathsson (1907–88) was a key international figure in 20th-century Swedish furniture and architectural design whose reputation and appeal continues to grow. This exhibition of approximately 150 examples of furniture, architectural drawings, photographs, and models is curated by Hedvig Hedqvist, the renowned Swedish art critic and design historian, and Karin Åberg Waern, curator at the Swedish Museum of Architecture in Stockholm. It is organized by The Bruno Mathsson Foundation, a nonprofit organization in Värnamo, Sweden, dedicated to preserving Mathsson’s legacy and supporting progressive design in Sweden in collaboration with The Swedish Museum of Architecture. The exhibition is being circulated by the Swedish Institute in Stockholm.
Furniture
Bruno Mathsson was born in Värnamo, Sweden. His father, Karl, whose furniture business would later manufacture many of Bruno’s designs, was a fourth-generation
master joiner and gave his son a thorough knowledge of wood technology. From the beginning, Bruno was fascinated by the possibilities of developing the form and function of furniture using new wood technology. In the 1920s and 1930s he became deeply involved in studying and developing the functional possibilities of wood.
In 1931 Mathsson developed his first chair, the “Grasshopper,” for Värnamo Hospital to place in a reception area. (It was said that people found it so ugly it was quickly relegated to the attic.) But this innovative chair, with its woven, webbed seat stretched across a frame whose arm rest and legs were made of one arched wooden piece sculpted into an interpretation of a grasshopper’s legs, was his first expression of what furniture could and should be. He stripped away traditional upholstery, making the hemp webbing both functional and aesthetically pleasing, and began to develop the ultimate seating, which should, he believed, have the ability to separate into a lounge chair, an easy chair, and a work chair. He thought that individual furniture designs should interact with the room in which they were placed and with the architecture. He also discarded traditional ideas on the height of chairs and tables, and created slender furniture forms and seating adapted to lower horizontal surfaces. Function and comfort were his primary objectives, and the mechanics of seating occupied his mind. Inspired by Le Corbusier, he experimented with the physiology of the seating curves adjusted according to the body, which in turn resulted in prototypes for the work, easy, and lounge chairs. His furniture is undoubtedly influenced by the bentwood designs of Alvar Aalto, but Mathsson’s commitment to bentwood and the range and virtuosity of the material he achieved exceeds all of his contemporaries, including Marcel Breuer, among others. Mathsson possessed an uncanny feeling for the material qualities of bentwood. His furniture designs are unique in their sensuously undulating lines and the elegant, organic way in which their contours echo the human form.
Mathsson’s international reputation was launched with the bentwood
furniture he exhibited in the Swedish pavilion at the 1937 World
Exposition in Paris. Edgar Kaufmann Jr. saw the furniture and recommended
that the Eva Chair, then called the Work Chair, be purchased for
the public rooms at the new Museum of Modern Art building in New
York City, designed by Philip Goodwin and Edward Durrell Stone and
completed in 1939. That same year, Mathsson furniture was shown at
the Swedish pavilion at the New York World’s Fair, which provided further
impetus for his extensive popularity and influence in the United
States. During the 1940s Artek Pasco distributed the furniture, which
became a commercial success, appearing in numerous domestic and
public buildings designed by leading modern architects across the
country. In 1949 Baldwin Kingrey, the largest retailer of modern furniture
in the Midwest, gave Mathsson a one-man show in its Chicago store
that received extensive publicity.
Mathsson’s popularity dwindled somewhat during the 1950s when, despite requests by many distributors of modern furniture (such as Knoll Associates) to manufacture and distribute his designs, he refused to relinquish control of them. Nor would he succumb to the demands of the marketplace by altering the specifications of his bentwood designs to enable larger orders. In the early 1950s he was still doing his own marketing and trying to maintain production according to his original specifications and distribute independently. Increasingly, his attention turned to architecture. In the 1960s, Dux Industries, the Swedish furniture company, began manufacturing and distributing Mathsson bentwood furniture. Mathsson began working with tubular steel. His most audacious design from this period is the super ellipse table created in collaboration with Piet Hein, the Danish mathematician. The elegant table rested on span legs that could easily be removed with a tension mechanism. The span leg gave the impression of the elliptical form hovering in space. Mathsson continued to actively explore design possibilities into the 1980s, and he once again became interested in the office environment and the ergonomics of seating. He soon began designing for the electronic age, including computer tables and work stations. Today Mathsson furniture is manufactured by Bruno Mathsson International and by Dux Industries.
ARCHITECTURE
Following a visit to the famous Stockholm Exhibition in 1930, Mathsson
became intrigued by the possibilities of modernism in design and
architecture. Although the primary focus of his long and prodigious
career was designing furniture, he aspired to be an architect. Selftaught,
he often approached architecture in the same way he did furniture,
experimenting with the inherent properties of different
materials, particularly glass, and conceiving of architecture as a craft. He
insisted that his designs respond to the basic needs of a modern
lifestyle. His architectural interests were broadened when he visited the
United States during 1948–49 and toured major urban centers across
the country. Through Edgar Kaufmann he met many leading figures
within modern design circles in this country and discovered new
building methods and approaches
to modern design that he adapted
to his unique conception of architecture.
Always wedded to the
essential connection between man
and nature, he developed a simple
floor plan for the modern house,
one that utilized large spans of glass.
His primary goal was to enhance the
connection between interior and
exterior space, bringing the natural
landscape as much as possible into
the modern living or work space.
During the 1950s, while working primarily as an architect of glass houses,
Mathsson also developed patents for floor heating and for two- or
three- paned windows, inspired by the American architect George
Keck. Mathsson’s most accomplished house design, in 1955, employed
passive solar heat for the Danderyd house. Perhaps his most effective
single-family house is Kungsör (1954), located outside Stockholm, a
combination residence and showroom that embodies the connections
between interior and exterior space, which were always the leitmotif of
Mathsson’s designs. The house and garden possess an intimacy that is
obtained through an unusual triangular plan.
Mathsson designed Frösakull, one of the most daring examples of his
glass houses, in 1960. The floor plan groups the rooms around two sides
of a sun garden, with bedrooms along the northern side and a living
room along the eastern side. The living room has glass walls on two
sides, and a third side, facing the sun garden, can be opened. The walls
dissolve the boundary between inside and outside. Sliding doors constructed
from glass fiber reinforced with corrugated plastic make it possible
to change the living room layout according to need, while the
transparent plastic ceiling allows light to filter through a specially
designed inner roof of wooden slats. The building, together with its furnishings,
reflects Mathsson’s understanding of proportion and his commitment
to exploiting the inherent properties of modern materials. This
building—as with all Mathsson’s buildings at their best—has an
extremely light and graceful construction. His best floor plans are simple
and logical, incorporating a flexibility and orientation according to the
points on the compass. The choice of materials is functional and experimental
and emphasizes the dissolution of interior and exterior, while
the use of an exterior “room” for healthier living, in the form of sun gardens,
is a recurring theme.
Exhibition
Organized chronologically to best convey the ideas that Mathsson invested
in the creation of his bentwood furniture designs, the exhibition
traces the designer’s career from the end of the 1920s to the end of the
1980s. It features more than 50 examples of the three furniture forms—
lounge chair, easy chair, work chair, and includes a selection of dining,
side, and work tables and desks that Mathsson designed, always catering
to what he considered the specific needs of modern living. Swedish
designers Anna von Schewen and Björn Dahlström planned the installation and recreated
a room from Frösakull with furniture that visitors can sit in, to
actually experience the pleasure of relaxing in a Mathsson chair in a
Mathsson-designed room. Architectural drawings on loan to the exhibition
from the Mathsson archives in Värnamo convey Mathsson’s
approach to the domestic floor plan and the connection between
nature and the modern interior. A digital slide show of color and blackand-
white photographs is projected on the gallery walls, illustrating
Mathsson’s exhibition interiors and the domestic and public buildings
he designed from the 1930s through the 1970s.
Catalogue
Bruno Mathsson: Architect and Designer is the first English-language
publication on this major contributor to 20th-century modern design.
Distributed by Yale University Press and published by Bokförlaget
Arena, Malmö and Stockholm, the book features three essays: one by
Dag Widman, formerly chief curator of applied arts at the Nationalmuseum
in Stockholm, on Mathsson furniture designs; a second by
Karin Winter, curator at the Swedish Museum of Architecture, on his
glass houses; and a third by Nina Stritzler-Levine, director of exhibitions
at the Bard Graduate Center, examining Mathsson’s reception in the
United States. It includes previously unpublished photographs of
Mathsson’s furniture in situ and new color photographs of many of his
furniture and architectural designs.
Related Programs
An array of lectures, panels, and other offerings will be presented in
conjunction with Bruno Mathsson: Architect and Designer. For further information, please call 212-501-3011 or e-mail
programs@bgc.bard.edu.
Exhibition Tours
Group tours of Bruno Mathsson: Architect and Designer may be scheduled
Tuesday through Friday between 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., and on
Thursdays until 7:00 p.m. Reservations are required for all groups. For
further information, please call the Bard Graduate Center Gallery at
212-501-3013 or TTY 212-501-3012, or e-mail gallery@bgc.bard.edu.
The Bard Graduate Center is located at 18 West 86 Street, between Central Park West and Columbus Avenue, in New York City. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Sunday from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Thursday from 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Admission is $3 general, $2 seniors and students (with valid ID), and free on Thursday evenings after 5:00 p.m. For further information about the Bard Graduate Center and upcoming exhibitions, please visit our website at www.bgc.bard.edu.
Support for Bruno Mathsson: Architect and Designer has been generously provided by The Swedish Institute.
Upcoming Exhibitions
Summer 2007 A Brass Menagerie: Metalwork of the Aesthetic Movement, organized by Munson-Williams-Proctor Museum of Art, Utica, New York
Fall 2007 Meissen Porcelain for Foreign Courts in Eighteenth-Century Europe
For further information, please call 212-501-3000 or e-mail generalinfo@bgc.bard.edu.
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