Model 4130 thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Model 4130

Chair
1957 (designed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Arne Jacobsen's famous Ant chair of 1952 was the starting point for a number of variants whose common element was a continuous plywood seat and back. This chair is the only version with timber legs: the other variants all have steel legs. The back is a more angular and blocky version of the most popular chair in the series, the sinuous 3107 chair designed two years earlier (see Circ.371-1970). This version is also sometimes known as the Grand Prix chair because it won the prestigious Grand Prix award at the Milan Triennale in 1957, the year of its introduction. Later it was made with steel legs, and renumbered 3130. A version was used by Jacobsen to furnish the National Bank of Denmark in Copenhagen, which he designed between 1965 and 1971.


Object details

Category
Object type
Titles
  • Model 4130 (manufacturer's title)
  • Grand Prix (popular title)
Materials and techniques
Laminated and moulded teak and beech
Brief description
Grand Prix Chair model 4130, designed by Arne Jacobsen, 1957, manufactured by Fritz Hansen, Denmark, laminated beech frame and laminated and moulded teak seat and back
Physical description
Chair with laminated and moulded teak back and seat and laminated beech legs
Dimensions
  • Height: 735mm
  • Width: 475mm
  • Depth: 495mm
Extrapolated from imperial dimensions on the registered description
Style
Production typeMass produced
Summary
Arne Jacobsen's famous Ant chair of 1952 was the starting point for a number of variants whose common element was a continuous plywood seat and back. This chair is the only version with timber legs: the other variants all have steel legs. The back is a more angular and blocky version of the most popular chair in the series, the sinuous 3107 chair designed two years earlier (see Circ.371-1970). This version is also sometimes known as the Grand Prix chair because it won the prestigious Grand Prix award at the Milan Triennale in 1957, the year of its introduction. Later it was made with steel legs, and renumbered 3130. A version was used by Jacobsen to furnish the National Bank of Denmark in Copenhagen, which he designed between 1965 and 1971.
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.906-1968

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Record createdDecember 1, 2005
Record URL
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