Scandinavian easy chair PK 22 limited edition 60th birthday

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Scandinavian easy chair PK 22 limited edition 60th birthday. New product specially edited in 2016 to celebrate the PK 22 60th birthday.

In 2016 Fritz Hansen saluted the Danish cabinetmaker Poul Kjaerholm and his 1956 works - the PK22 easy chair. Introduced in 1956, the PK22 easy chair was an immediate commercial and critical success. The chair won the Grand Prix at the 1957 XI Triennale di Milano.  

This special and liited édition is numbered, and proposed in brow-grey nubuck and black steel !

We have only one in stock.

Year 1956
Condition New product. on demand.
Dimensions Height : 72 cm. Width : 63 cm. Depth : 67 cm. Seat height : 37 cm.
Material Dark steel frame and nubuck leather seat
Style Classique
Vintage
Origin
Denmark
Fournisseur Fritz Hansen

Poul Kjearholm

Denmark (1929-1980)

 

Architect Poul Kjærholm finished his training as a cabinetmaker in 1949 and continued his education at the Danish School of Arts and Crafts’ Furniture School, graduating in 1952. At the same time he sat in on lectures at The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts’ School of Architecture. He first taught at The Danish School of Arts and Crafts and then at The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts’ School of Architecture, where he took over Ole

Wanscher’s professorate in 1976. Poul Kjærholm was inspired by the international functionalism and its minimalist steel tube furniture, but he did not imitate it. He elaborated on it and developed it until he had created independent furniture in a personal style. The starting point was the particular qualities of the steel; the aim was that the shape of the object should reflect the material it was made from.

This started with Kjærholm’s final examination project from The Danish School of Arts and Crafts, the Flagline chair (PK25), where each side consists of a piece of sliced spring steel, which has been bent to form both legs and armrests. A few years later he had re-designed PK25 and created a new recliner (PK22) consisting of a few steel components, which had been joined with Allen screws (RP00219). This made it easier to create clear and readable constructions, where even the joints with Allen screws were used decoratively. The steel was matt polished to avoid reflections from the light. PK22 was the first chair in a series of steel tube furniture based on the same construction scheme. A good example is the classically beautiful armchair PK11, the serene Tulip chair PK9 (RP00221) and the elegant lounger PK24 (RP00224). It was not just the furniture that had to be beautiful, the individual parts had to be so too. Kjærholm demonstrated this by joining several identical construction elements together into large sculptures at his exhibitions. Kjærholm also experimented with wood furniture and created the pivotal shell chair of moulded veneer PK0 (RP01481) and the armchair PK15 made from steambent wood.

With his sculptural steel furniture, Poul Kjærholm created his own style of furniture characterized by simple and serene constructions, which also functioned on the purely aesthetic level. One might say that Poul Kjærholm was a pioneer of steel furniture in the same way as Hans J. Wegner was a pioneer of wooden furniture.