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From Bicycle to Chair

If you have ever ridden a bike for a long period of time, you will appreciate the importance of a comfy saddle or more importantly a good frame design.

Having ridden road bikes since my late 20's I soon realised that the right frame design and material can make such a difference when out on those long Sunday outings. A light durable frame can allow your seating position and comfort to be an enjoyable experience, rather than constantly thinking about how uncomfortable the whole experience is.

The comparison to sitting on a well designed chair is something that Hungarian designer Marcel Breuer shared on his first day working for Bauhaus in 1925.  I have a slight obsession with well designed, aesthetically pleasing chairs. When first starting the business, I soon discovered that I was drawn to tubular frame design, accompanied by a leather seat or fabric cover. That may have been due to my love of cycling at the time and could appreciate the connection due to my early research. When I was sourcing furniture I tended to be drawn to these style of chairs, not just for their aesthetics but also for their comfort.

A good chair seems to be a statement piece in any house hold, and very much like those long bike rides, if you're sitting on it for a long period of time whilst reading your favourite novel, the go to thing has to be comfort. However we are talking comfort here and not style or aesthetics, when you have both, then you're definitely onto a winning formula.

In 1925 Breuer was so impressed by his bicycle’s strength and lightness, along with its ability to hold the weight of one or two riders, he asked himself "why then could it not be used for furniture?” Using his design concept Breuer then went directly to the tubular steel manufacturer, Mannesmann steelworks, which had invented the tubular steel design frame of his Adler Bicycle. Mannesmann’s seamless steel, first produced towards the end of the 19th century, could be bent and reshaped without losing much of its strength. For those people who ride bikes on a regular basis will know that steel-framed bikes are not only sturdy but provide good flex as well. Marcel learned to exploit this to his advantage.

Breuer's first design using the bent tubular steel was given the name B3, a numbering system Breuer would use for all his furniture for the next several years.  The final design came in late 1925 where this chair eventually became the iconic 'Wassily' chair in tribute to his colleague and friend Wassily Kandinsky who was said to have loved the chair. 

It is ironic that Breuer was employed by Bauhaus as director of the carpentry workshop and went totally against the grain so to speak when coming up with and developing this concept. Finnish designer Alvar Aalto used Breuer’s tubular steel furniture as inspiration to produce his own first bent plywood furniture in response to Breuer’s tubular steel chairs, The Armchair 31. Interestingly Aalto felt Breuer's tubular frame designs were too cold to the touch for his Nordic climate. Maybe a little designer jealousy?

Since the design concept of using tubular steel frames, many designers followed suit. When we look at the tubular chairs Pel produced in the 1930's, Pieff Alpha and Kadia range of the 1970's, Kem Webber for Lloyd manufacturing to name but a few, that initial concept has stood the test of time.

When you next take a look at the frame of a road bike, notice how the drop handle bars are the influence of the arm rests on any tubular designed chair frame that follows it's original design. The genius concept of someone who road their bike to work and decided to act upon a gut feeling they had that this could actually work, has created a piece of  iconic furniture design that will exist in people's house holds for years to come.  

As Ricky Gervais' character David Brent said in an episode of The Office ….. "A good idea, is a good idea forever".



 
by Ted & Mack's 1 January 2023
I magine a world where the iconic egg chair designed by Arne Jacobsen did not exist in today's modern interior world. This is a chair that has been replicated by many modern designers to this day, and still acts as a statement piece in any household that is lucky enough to own an original. Also imagine the mid century architecture such as Farnsworth House designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe not inhabiting the landscapes of the United States and beyond. Imagine Dutch artist Piet Mondarians never painting his Neo-plasticism styles Composition Paintings of the early 1940's. To help realise the importance of these designers in their role and impact on mid century design, one only has to look at the history books to see how things could have been a lot different. With the onset of WW11, and Germany's occupation of Denmark, modernism ideas and design were in threat. Prior to the outbreak of WW11, In July 1937, four years after it came to power, the Nazi party put on two art exhibitions in Munich. The Great German Art Exhibition was designed to show works that Hitler approved of - depicting statuesque blonde nudes along with idealised soldiers and landscapes. The second exhibition, just down the road, showed the other side of German art, modern, abstract, non-representational or as the Nazis saw it, "Degenerate". The Degenerate Art Exhibition included works by some of the great international names - Paul Klee, Van Gogh, Picasso, Oskar Kokoschka and Wassily Kandinsky. The exhibition featured 650 works of what the Nazis deemed "monstrosities of madness." The point was to shame the artists and convince all Germans that modern art was a perversion created by sick minds. Hitler had been an artist before he was a politician - but the realistic paintings of buildings and landscapes that he preferred had been dismissed by the art establishment in favour of abstract and modern styles. Modernism was not just an inferior or distasteful style. It wasn't even just non-Aryan. Modernism was a swindle – a dangerous lie perpetuated by Jews, communists, and even the insane to contaminate the body of German society. In terms of modernist architecture and design, ironically it is believed that Hitler was an amateur architect. He had once been refused admission to the Viennese academy's architecture school and liked nothing better on a Sunday afternoon than to pour over plans with eager to please Albert Speer, a young architect who had caught the Nazi bug. He would discuss the minutiae of cross-sections and tinker with designs, which he always referred to as "my building plans", as if Speer were merely the conduit for Hitler's grand visions. However, this all changed when propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels challenged Hitler's taste for sentimental nationalist architecture. And so, by chance, it was decided that the Third Reich's landscape was not to be the sleek, industrial modernism, but Hansel and Gretel gothic, and a bombastic classicism of inflated porticoes, pediments and columns, with all their cheap analogies with the Roman empire. This threat to the modernism way of thinking by the Nazi's forced Arne Jacobsen to abandon his office and go into exile to escape planned deportation. He fled Denmark, rowing a small boat across Øresund to neighbouring Sweden where he would stay for the next two years. During this time he would meet Finish architect and designer Alvar Aalto, whom helped set up an apartment for him and an arrangement which allowed Arne to continue his business in Copenhagen until his return after the war. Dutch artist Piet Mondrian was a painter that had developed from realistic images of landscapes and Dutch scenes to more abstract styles paintings. Born in the Netherlands, he moved to Paris in 1911, where he integrated himself into the Parisian avant-garde lifestyle. He had been inspired by the paintings of Vincent van Gogh, with their brilliant colours and intense brushwork and was influenced by the cubist paintings of Picasso. His art continued to develop until his paintings were reduced to simple geometric colours and shapes. Mondrian had fled Paris after the bombing, and he ventured to London. But London was also under attack, and he wasn’t there long before the air raids started to destroy the city. So he fled again to arrive in New York. German Born Mies van der Rohe decided to leave Germany while standing in a field in Wisconsin in late 1937. Years after designing the iconic Barcelona chair for the international expo for Knoll, for the first time he was nervous in his own country. The time had come to follow the millions before him and make his own, rather less noble escape from the Nazis. Mies packed what he could in a small suitcase, hurried on to a train to Rotterdam and took the steamer to New York. If Hilter had succeeded, maybe all creativity in the modern world outside of the Nazi Ideology would have been threatened. Hitler learned that if you control a culture’s past then you can rewrite their future. Art is culture manifested, a physical representation of a society’s historical narrative and ideals. Hitler wished to gain legitimacy and prestige through a show of power over the cultures that created these masterpieces. The ideas and foresight to create something that is an expression of one self may have had to live in ones mind or behind closed doors in the fear that it would have been rejected or worse still, executed for. However, art is imagination which in turn develops creativity. This urge can never be controlled and is the reason why these creative minds eventually flourished over a reign that aimed to keep them in the shadows. “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.” Edmund Burke
by Ted & Mack's 25 July 2021
It is one of the most iconic images in film history, and no one knows where it is. The original artwork for “Jaws,” used for both the cover of the Peter Benchley book and the Steven Spielberg film, has vanished, says artist Roger Kastel. Kastel was in the offices of publisher Bantam in 1974 when boss Oscar Dystel handed him a copy of the thriller. “Oscar said to me, ‘It’s going to be a best-seller'. Kastel didn’t have to go beyond the first few pages to find the most arresting passage, when young Chrissie Watkins goes skinny-dipping off the coast of Amity, a fictional Northeast resort town, and becomes a snack for a massive great white shark. “I just thought it was a great visual,” says Kastel, now 89. “I did a very rough sketch for Len Leones (Bantam art director) while we were talking, and he OK’d it. He told me to make the shark larger and more realistic.” Kastel headed over to the American Museum of Natural History and took a few photos of stuffed sharks waiting to be cleaned. For the swimmer, a photographer friend suggested 24-year-old Wilhelmina model Allison Maher. The shoot was one of her first jobs. “I knew it was a book cover and that was it,” says the now-model, now named Allison Stern, who married real-estate developer Leonard Stern and is now a prominent philanthropist, with an area named for her at the Central Park Zoo. She lay across two stools to simulate a swimming motion, and was paid $35. Stern says she didn’t get recognized despite the poster’s ubiquity, including being on a giant billboard in Times Square. “If you know me, you can tell it’s me,” says Stern, who has a copy of the poster signed by Spielberg. “But I think everyone assumed the girl swimming was the girl from the movie.” Kastel painted oil on Masonite, and “Jaws” didn’t take him long. It was likely one of three paintings he completed that month. In his career, he created some 1,000 posters and covers including he artwork for 'The Empire Strikes Back'. “It was a pleasure to do, but I never thought it would be as huge as it is now,” Kastel says. Bantam allowed the filmmakers to use the paperback’s image as the movie poster, free of charge. The only alteration was to strategically position sea foam over the swimmer’s bare breasts. “The book company told me how much the art helped sell,” says Kastel of the paperback that had moved some 6 million copies by late 1975. “I’ve never heard from anyone in the movies. What really bothered me was that they used the image for merchandising. You see that poster on everything.” Upon its completion, the work toured bookstores and made other appearances. The last time Kastel saw it was at an American Museum of Natural History illustration show in the 1970s. From there it made its way to La La Land and was never seen again. Kastel remembers his last glimpse of his approximately 20-by-30-inch painting. "It was hanging at the Society of Illustrators in New York," he says. "It was framed because it was on a book tour, and then it went out to Hollywood for the movie. I expected it to come back, but it never did, more than likely to have been stolen" "Most original art for movie posters does not do that well," antiques roadshow appraiser Rudy Franchihe explains. "The art world treats it as commercial flotsam, while poster collectors believe that if it isn't on paper, it's not a movie poster. There are exceptions, of course, and the artwork for 'Jaws' would be one. This is one of the most powerful images of the last century, and the fact that it's not just the art for a tawdry movie poster but also for a proper book would broaden its appeal. There are some fanatic 'Jaws' collectors out there who would rent their soul to have this. I would estimate a sales price north of £15,000, with a much higher price quite probable." "A sketch that I did years ago for 'The Empire Strikes Back' was auctioned off recently for a lot of money," says Kastel simply. And what does he think happened to his "Jaws" painting? There are really only two possibilities. "Either someone has it or it's lost in storage at Universal. Whatever has happened to this original piece of artwork pales into insignificants when you look at the shear impact that Kastel's image has had on people's psyche. Peter Benchley's story, both as a novel and for the movie adaptation allowed Kastel to create a visual that truly made the reader and viewer sit up and listen. Hopefully the original artwork, wherever it may be, will return to it's rightful owner one day, so that Roger Kastel can admire all that it has become. Sources: New York Post; The Guardian.
You only live once
by Ted & Mack's 28 December 2020
Why James Bond first editions by Jonathan Cape increasing in price?
by Ted & Mack's 9 August 2020
If you like the idea of living a modern life then this is in part to the design foresight of Swiss architect Le Corbusier. When I first starting travelling around the globe, I was always fascinated with the architecture and grandeur of the historical landmarks that attract so many tourists. Their purpose at first glance was that of decoration and wow factor. To see the Acropolis of Athens for the very first time or the ancient pyramids of Egypt allows you to be transported to a time where the architecture was more about the aesthetics and statement of the building and not the practicality of it. This was not something I really thought about as a young traveller visiting these architectural masterpieces. It was always about the ornateness of it all. Le Corbusier started challenging the architecture of the Victorian age and contrasted it with what he believed to be the style and beauty of modern engineering. In his 1923 book 'Towards a New Architecture' he explained that there was no longer the money or practical need to erect or design historically souvenirs such as the Arc de Triumph in Paris but more a practical design architecture. Le Corbusier suggested that the architecture of the future should be aesthetic and clean, disciplined and frugal. For Le Corbusier it was not about the elaborate wall paintings and Boroc detailing seen in the likes of Rome, it was about true architecture which was about the quest for modern efficiency seen in the design concepts of a electricity turbine or aeroplane blueprint. Le Corbusier observed that the requirements of flight rid aeroplanes of all the superfluous detail needed for it to function. Le Corbusier used this principle in his architectural methods and suggested to place a statue on top of an aeroplane is just as absurd as placing it on top of a house or building. Le Corbusier asked himself if the function of a plane was to fly then what was the function of a house? Le Corbusier arrived at a list of simple requirements beyond which all other requirements and ambitions were romantic cobwebs. The function of the house was to provide shelter, a receptacle for light and sun and a number of cells for cooking, work and personal life. The private houses Le Corbusier had designed in and around Paris in the 1920's were unlike anything people had ever witnessed both inside and out. This is when Le Corbusier designed much of the furniture for these houses himself, often earning more money from it than his architecture. His iconic LC3 series and LC4 chaise lounge chair has not dated in the slightest, and still fits perfectly with the modern home today. This is mainly due to Le Corbusier's conviction that the binomial shape/function must be expressed in the three dimensional manifestation of any daily used and useful object. Although I agree with Le Corbusier's vision for modern practicality and efficiency for architecture and furniture design, I still think that there needs to be the ornate and grandeur present in any home interior. Le Corbusier did have a one dimensional approach when he wrote 'The city of tomorrow and it's planning' which detailed his vision to level many cities and rebuild it with high rises, solving over crowding and urban sprawl. What Le Corbusier failed to realise was that these high rises, although efficient can lose it's architectural beauty and aesthetic due to it's drab concrete structure under a grey sky. Whenever you look at modern architecture and design, Le Corbusier certainly has a place in the history books. When we look at furniture design especially, his concept of functionality and purpose still resonates to this day. The clean lines and natural curves of the Cassina LC4 Chaise Longue embodies stunning contemporary design and comfort . However, to live in a home where this style of design is all that is present, I feel can make it too cold and industrial. Ironically the fact that you can now mix this modern style with some ornate ceiling decoration replicating the Sistine Chapel by Michelangelo (Maybe a bit ambitious) is what makes modern interior design so exciting and special. It has to be about expression and detail to ones tastes. Le Corbusier frowned upon the ornate and over exuberance of past architecture within the home, favouring clean lines and functionality. To me he was part of something that now allows both styles of architecture and design to be blended together to make the perfect home in the 21st Century. I wonder what he would of thought?
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