DAF armchair
Armchair
1956 (designed)
1956 (designed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
George Nelson was a successful industrial designer with his own office in New York, and from 1946 he was also design director for the Herman Miller furniture company. The furniture that Nelson's office designed for Herman Miller shared many similarities with designs by Charles and Ray Eames, with whom Nelson was friendly. For example, the fibreglass shell and rubber mounts were innovations first first used by the Eameses. The organic, freeform shape of the fibreglass shells that make up the seat unit also relate the chair to contemporary art of the time. The design of the chair has always been attributed to George Nelson himself, although much of the work was undertaken in his office by Charles Pollock, then only in his twenties. It is a characteristic of industrial design offices that products are often collaborations between numerous designers, as well as the manufacturers.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | DAF armchair (manufacturer's title) |
Materials and techniques | Moulded fibreglass and bent tubular steel |
Brief description | Armchair of moulded fibreglass |
Physical description | Armchair, the seat and side panels formed from a single off-white fibreglass shell, attached to a second off-white fibreglass shell forming the back and armrests. The pedestal base is constructed from four tapered, serpentine legs finished with black rubber feet. |
Dimensions |
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Production type | Mass produced |
Production | Untitled, undated off-print article (possibly from the Architectural Review or Design magazine) in the Nelson craftsman file notes: "Most of the work on the swaged-leg chair was done by Charles Pollock, a staff designer in the Nelson office. He worked under the direct supervision of Irving Harper, who is in general charge of design, and John Pile, in charge of the Herman Miller Furniture Company's affairs at Nelson's." |
Summary | George Nelson was a successful industrial designer with his own office in New York, and from 1946 he was also design director for the Herman Miller furniture company. The furniture that Nelson's office designed for Herman Miller shared many similarities with designs by Charles and Ray Eames, with whom Nelson was friendly. For example, the fibreglass shell and rubber mounts were innovations first first used by the Eameses. The organic, freeform shape of the fibreglass shells that make up the seat unit also relate the chair to contemporary art of the time. The design of the chair has always been attributed to George Nelson himself, although much of the work was undertaken in his office by Charles Pollock, then only in his twenties. It is a characteristic of industrial design offices that products are often collaborations between numerous designers, as well as the manufacturers. |
Bibliographic reference | Modern chairs 1918-1970, London, Lund Humphries, 1971 |
Collection | |
Accession number | CIRC.75-1970 |
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Record created | February 20, 2006 |
Record URL |
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