Thursday 17 November 2011

Manufacturing Process


The base plate is made out of 5mm rolled steel sheet.



The steel tubing welded on to the top plate is 51mm in diameter. The top plate is re-used from the original chair.




The original backrest was used as a mould to make two more back rests. It was made by gluing and clamping 1.5mm bending veneer ply.


The seat used is the one from the original chair.

Final Concept Technical Drawings


Monday 15 August 2011

Armchair 41


Hugo Alvar Henrik Aalto, one of the first and most influential architects and designers of the Scandinavian modern movement, designed the Armchair 41 also known as the Piamio chair. Aalto had a unique style based on irregular and symmetric forms and the imaginative use of natural materials. His most famous architectural work is the Finlandia Hall in Helsinki, Finland

The Armchair 41 was created as a part of the Paimio Sanatorium’s overall project, which Aalto was commissioned to design after an award he won for a competition. His idea was to create an exquisite piece of furniture that would support its purpose.  The chair was designed for tuberculosis patients to spend long hours on it every day as the angle of the back rest was perfect and assisted them with breathing easily. 

Although inspired by Marcel Breuer's metal Wassily chair, Aalto decided to deviate away from the traditional use of metal tubes and use something warmer and more human for the furniture. The Armchair 41 was manufactured of bent plywood and laminated wood. The frame of the chair was shaped of laminated birch bent into a unique closed curve with solid birch rails and the seat of the chair is molded from one piece of plywood. The idea was to make a wooden chair feel soft, and Aalto delivered this feeling through its springy seat.

In succeeding to find the perfect balance between abstraction, tradition, natural materials and organic form, the Armchair 41, marked of the beginning of Aalto's career as a furniture designer. Now a design icon, the Armchair 41 is available in numerous museums around the world.

Sketches

Here are a couple of sketches I drew and partially rendered, of some of the chairs at the NGV




Revisiting the 20th Century

As part of our first step in developing our ideas for the 'Reinterpreted Chair', we paid a visit to the NGV to have a look at some of the most remarkable chairs of the 20th Century. Below are a couple of shots of some of my favourite chairs