- Model 3107 chair
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The Model 3107 chair is one of the most popular chairs in Danish design history.[according to whom?] It was designed by Arne Jacobsen, using a new technique in which plywood could be bent in two dimensions. Over 5 million units have been produced exclusively by Fritz Hansen ever since its invention in 1955. It is also the most copied chair in the world.[citation needed]
Being a "copy" itself contributes some irony to that fact. The chair, along with the Jacobsen's Ant chair, was, according to Jacobsen himself, inspired by a chair made by the husband and wife design team of Charles and Ray Eames.
The chair comes with a number of different undercarriges - both as a regular four-legged chair, an office-chair with five wheels and as a barstool. It comes with armrests, a writing-table attached, and different forms of upholstering. To some extent, these additions mar the simple aesthetics of the chair, while contributing practical elements.
The chair is widely believed to have been used in Lewis Morley's iconic photograph of Christine Keeler; however, the chair used in this photograph was in fact an imitation and not the original Jacobsen model. After the publishing of the pictures sales rose dramatically.[1] Numerous images in print media have been made with a celebrity mimicking the pose, notably David Frost and a pop single cover of the Spice Girls.
References
- ^ dwell.com: The 3107 Chair
External links
- "A Modern Icon - The Chair". Photography. Victoria and Albert Museum. http://www.vam.ac.uk/collections/photography/past_exhns/seeing/chair/. Retrieved 2007-06-07. – The Keeler chair compared with the Model 3107
Categories:- 1955 works
- Chairs
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