Column of Drawers
1977-1978 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
The ‘column of drawers’ is a free-standing storage unit. It consists of a stack of drawers that pivot from a central steel spine, which runs through the whole unit. Each drawer is made from thin and narrow veneers, which are bent and stacked on a coloured acrylic (plastic) drawer bottom. The acrylic contrasts with the natural colour of the wood and creates dashes of bright colour when the drawers are opened. Although the materials used are not particularly rare or valuable, each element of the unit was carefully chosen. The painstaking task of working it by hand into this novel form took many hours. John Makepeace (born 1939), who designed this column of drawers, started to produce expensive luxury furniture in the 1960s. The pieces were handmade and specially commissioned. The V&A purchased the column of drawers in 1978, at a time when John Makepeace was selling pieces to British museums. He was then celebrated as the leading British designer of craft furniture. Although identified as a furniture maker, Makepeace gave up working at the bench relatively early in his career in order to concentrate on design. Members of his studio probably made this column of drawers at Parnham House in Dorset, where he ran a furniture-making school from 1977-2000.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Birch plywood, acrylic and stainless steel |
Brief description | Column of drawers, designer John Makepeace, manufacturer John Makepeace Ltd., 1977-1978 |
Physical description | Free-standing stack of two-lobed circular drawers which pivot from a central steel spine, and rest on a thick wooden base. Each drawer is made from multiple layers of birch plywood on a plastic drawer bottom which contrasts with the colour of the wood and gives consistent dashes of colour. |
Dimensions |
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Gallery label |
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Object history | Purchased from John Makepeace Ltd, Dorset. |
Historical context | Derived from an earlier version by which he was represented in the 1973 'The Craftsman's Art' exhibition and in the C.A.C.'s 1978 booklet 'Craftsmen of Quality'. |
Summary | The ‘column of drawers’ is a free-standing storage unit. It consists of a stack of drawers that pivot from a central steel spine, which runs through the whole unit. Each drawer is made from thin and narrow veneers, which are bent and stacked on a coloured acrylic (plastic) drawer bottom. The acrylic contrasts with the natural colour of the wood and creates dashes of bright colour when the drawers are opened. Although the materials used are not particularly rare or valuable, each element of the unit was carefully chosen. The painstaking task of working it by hand into this novel form took many hours. John Makepeace (born 1939), who designed this column of drawers, started to produce expensive luxury furniture in the 1960s. The pieces were handmade and specially commissioned. The V&A purchased the column of drawers in 1978, at a time when John Makepeace was selling pieces to British museums. He was then celebrated as the leading British designer of craft furniture. Although identified as a furniture maker, Makepeace gave up working at the bench relatively early in his career in order to concentrate on design. Members of his studio probably made this column of drawers at Parnham House in Dorset, where he ran a furniture-making school from 1977-2000. |
Bibliographic reference | Wilk, Christopher, ed. . Western Furniture 1350 to the Present Day. London: Victoria and Albert Museum, 1996. 230p., ill. ISBN 085667463X. |
Collection | |
Accession number | W.56-1978 |
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Record created | March 17, 2000 |
Record URL |
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