The Art of Design Issue 22 2016 | Page 11

11 ICONIC PIECES The Baker sofa is another piece that holds many of the unique markers of Finn Juhl’s creative and technical expression. We see the principles and sinuous lines of modern art, just as we do in the Poet sofa. The sofa’s body is divided in two, a separation of elements that creates a visual lightness and naturally exposes the wooden spine which supports and separates the upholstered wings. It feels elegant and playful, at one in a new world of modern art and free spirts, but only allowed by the craftsmanship that holds centuries of experience. The France Chair marks another moment in Finn Juhl’s journey and holds the story of how he adapted and evolved his work to make commercial sense and so opened up the American market to Danish mid-century design, at the forefront of what became known world-wide as ‘Danish Modern’. Designed for France & Son, in fact a British entrepreneur who brought Danish design to the US in the 1950s, the France chair was intended for industrial production and has a simpler expression than many of Juhl’s other chairs. But Juhl’s signature is visible in the chair’s organic shapes and the liberated upholstered elements which seem to float as if they were freed from the law of gravity and make the chair seem almost aerodynamic. Clockwise: France chair designed for France & Son in 1949; Nyhavn Table and Tray Unit designed with coloured trays according to Goethe’s famous colour circle which are availble in a yellow / red scale and a blue scale; shown with the 46-Chair designed in 1946