Not currently on display at the V&A

'Ball' chair 08702

Chair
1963 (designed), 1966 (manufactured)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Eero Aarnio's Globe chair became an icon of Pop design in the late 1960s. Similar to Op Art of the period, derived from simple geometries of squares and circles, the chair is simply a dissected ball on a pivoting circular base. Since the 1950s chair designers had experimented with one-piece seats and backs but here these elements were expanded into an encompassing micro-environment, like a pod that isolated the sitter. Aarnio even installed telephones in some Globe chairs, acknowledging that they were like small private rooms.

The pod motif recurred through late-1960s design and surely related to the popular fascination with space travel, inspired by the Apollo missions that culminated in the moon landings at the end of the decade. The strict geometries, synthetic materials and colours, and space-capsule-like character completely disassociate the chair from nature and seem to point forward to an optimistic, technological, man-made future.


Object details

Category
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 3 parts.

  • Chair
  • Chair Cushion
  • Cushion
Title'Ball' chair 08702 (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Fibreglass and upholstery on metal base
Brief description
Ball chair (or 'globe' chair), designed by Eero Aarnio, 1963, manufactured by Asko, Finland, 1966; red metal pedestal base supporting a revolving red fibreglass globe lined with red upholstery
Physical description
Red fibreglass revolving chair with red upholstery and red metal base.
Dimensions
  • Width: 97.7cm
  • Height: 119cm
  • Depth: 66cm
Gallery label
Globe Chair Eero Aarnio (born 1932) Designed 1962-5, manufactured 1966 The Globe, or Ball Chair was intended by its designer to be a cocoon or private room for the sitter. Some versions even incorporated a telephone. The fibreglass sphere is mounted on a rotating pedestal base. Finland Manufacturer: Asko Finnternational, Helsinki Red fibreglass, upholstery and painted metal base V&A: Circ.12:1-3-1969(September 2009)
Object history
This chair was purchased for inclusion in the exhibition 'Modern Chairs, 1918-1970: and international exhibition presented by the Whitechapel Art Gallery in association with The Observer and arranged by the Circulation Department of the Victoria and Albert Museum'.
Summary
Eero Aarnio's Globe chair became an icon of Pop design in the late 1960s. Similar to Op Art of the period, derived from simple geometries of squares and circles, the chair is simply a dissected ball on a pivoting circular base. Since the 1950s chair designers had experimented with one-piece seats and backs but here these elements were expanded into an encompassing micro-environment, like a pod that isolated the sitter. Aarnio even installed telephones in some Globe chairs, acknowledging that they were like small private rooms.

The pod motif recurred through late-1960s design and surely related to the popular fascination with space travel, inspired by the Apollo missions that culminated in the moon landings at the end of the decade. The strict geometries, synthetic materials and colours, and space-capsule-like character completely disassociate the chair from nature and seem to point forward to an optimistic, technological, man-made future.
Bibliographic reference
Joelle D.J. Wickens, 'Documenting the Globe: Recording and Conserving Modern Upholstery Techniques and Materials Before They Disappear', in Ed. Karin Lohm, The Forgotten History – Upholstery Conservation. Linköping: University of Linköping, 2011. Papers of symposium held in Vadstena, Sweden in 2005, pp. 186-196, illus. on pp. 187, 188, 189.
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.12:1 to 3-1969

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Record createdMarch 4, 2003
Record URL
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