Untitled / Aluminium Chair

Untitled / Aluminium Chair

Gerrit RietveldWW-1942-vt42996
1942·Sheet aluminium·69,5 x 69,5 x 62,5 cm

During the German occupation of the Netherlands the architect and furniture designer Gerrit Thomas Rietveld was not allowed to practice his profession because he refused to become a member of the Nederlandsche Kultuurkamer, which supported National Socialist ideology. In anticipation of better times to come Rietveld revisited an old idea, ʻa chair that emerges from the machine in one fell swoopʼ.He produced innumerable sketches and made small models from acrylic glass and cardboard and eventually, with his son Wim, a metalworker and precision mechanic, produced a full-size model in aluminium in 1942. The tub-like seat, the separate back legs and the braces between the seat and the sides were beaten, bent, and riveted together by hand. The folded-over edges and the round holes serve to reinforce the sheet metal. The holes are reminiscent of the Landi Chair, which was designed by Hans Coray in 1938 and with which Rietveld was doubtlessly familiar.After the war, Rietveld’s Aluminium Chair attracted a lot of attention in magazines as well as exhibitions. Nevertheless, Rietveld was unable to find a manufacturer for the design; the form was probably too extreme. He and his sons produced three more examples in 1960. The design was never put into serial production, but more than ever speaks to the imagination, probably because the form dovetails well with the sculptural furniture realized in recent decades, including designs by Marc Newson and Ron Arad. Fragments from a filmed interview of Piet van Moock with Gerrit Rietveld in 1963, Onrust, De weelde van de soberheid, 1991. Driessen, Important 20th Century Design, lot no. 80.Text: Ida van Zijl

Catalogue

Year
1942
Dimensions
69,5 x 69,5 x 62,5 cm

Artist

Gerrit Rietveld
Gerrit Rietveld

Furniture

Gerrit Rietveld (24 June 1888 – 25 June 1964) was a Dutch furniture designer and architect. Early life Rietveld was born in Utrecht on August 1888 as the son of a joiner. He left school at 11 to be apprenticed to his father and enrolled at night school before working as a draughtsman for C. J. Begeer, a jeweller in Utrecht, from 1906 to 1911. De Stijl By the time he opened his own furniture workshop in 1917, Rietveld had taught himself drawing, painting and model-making. He afterwards set up in business as a cabinet-maker. Rietveld designed his Red and Blue Chair in 1917 which has become an iconic piece of modern furniture. Hoping that much of his furniture would eventually be mass-produced rather than handcrafted, Rietveld aimed for simplicity in construction. In 1918, he started his own furniture factory, and changed the chair's colours after becoming influenced by the De Stijl movement, of which he became a member in 1919, the same year in which he became an architect. The contacts that he made at De Stijl gave him the opportunity to exhibit abroad as well. In 1923, Walter Gropius invited Rietveld to exhibit at the Bauhaus. He built the Rietveld Schröder House, in 1924, in close collaboration with the owner Truus Schröder-Schräder. Built in Utrecht on the Prins Hendriklaan 50, the house has a conventional ground floor, but is radical on the top floor, lacking fixed walls but instead relying on sliding walls to create and change living spaces. The house has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2000. His involvement in the Schröder House exerted a strong influence on Truus' daughter, Han Schröder, who became one of the first female architects in the Netherlands. Nieuwe Zakelijkheid Rietveld broke with De Stijl in 1928 and became associated with a more functionalist style of architecture, known as either Nieuwe Zakelijkheid or Nieuwe Bouwen. The same year he joined the Congrès Internationaux d'Architecture Moderne. From the late 1920s he was concerned with social housing, inexpensive production methods, new materials, prefabrication and standardisation. In 1927 he was already experimenting with prefabricated concrete slabs, a very unusual material at that time. In the 1920s and 1930s, however, all his commissions came from private individuals, and it was not until the 1950s that he was able to put his progressive ideas about social housing into practice, in projects in Utrecht and Reeuwijk. Rietveld designed the Zig-Zag Chair in 1934 and started the design of the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, which was finished after his death. De Stijl revival In 1951 Rietveld designed a retrospective exhibition about De Stijl which was held in Amsterdam, Venice and New York. Interest in his work revived as a result. In subsequent years he was given many commissions, including the Dutch pavilion for the Venice Biennale (1953), the art academies in Amsterdam and Arnhem, and the press room for the UNESCO building in Paris. Designed for the display of small sculptures at the Third International Sculpture Exhibition in Arnhem's Sonsbeek Park in 1955, Rietveld's 'Sonsbeek Pavilion' was rebuilt at the Kröller-Müller Museum in 1965. Due to irreparable damages caused by regular decay, it was once again rebuilt, this time with new materials, in 2010. In order to handle all these projects, in 1961 Rietveld set up a partnership with the architects Johan van Dillen and J. van Tricht built hundreds of homes, many of them in the city of Utrecht. His work was neglected when rationalism came into vogue, but he later benefited from a revival of the style of the 1920s thirty years later. Death Rietveld died on 25 June 1964 in Utrecht. His son Wim Rietveld also became a renowned industrial designer. Recognition Rietveld had his first retrospective exhibition devoted to his architectural work at the Central Museum, Utrecht, in 1958. When the art academy in Amsterdam became part of the higher professional education system in 1968 and was given the status of an Academy for Fine Arts and Design, the name was changed to the Gerrit Rietveld Academy in honour of Rietveld. "Gerrit Rietveld: A Centenary Exhibition" at the Barry Friedman Gallery, New York, in 1988 was the first comprehensive presentation of the Dutch architect's original works ever held in the U.S. The highlight of a celebratory "Rietveld Year" in Utrecht, the exhibition "Rietveld's Universe" opened at the Centraal Museum and compared him and his work with famous contemporaries like Wright, Le Corbusier and Mies van der Rohe. Two software tools, both for code review, have been named after Gerrit Rietveld: Gerrit and Rietveld.

Utrecht

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Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
1942
Dimensions
69,5 x 69,5 x 62,5 cm
Watts ID
WW-1942-vt42996

Source

Source
museum_vitra
Status
verified

Artist

Gerrit Rietveld

Gerrit Rietveld

Furniture

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