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117

Alvar Aalto

Two-tier frame table, model nos. 75/83 and 915, designed for the Tuberculosis Sanatorium, Paimio

Estimate
£5,000 - 7,000
£8,125
Lot Details
Birch plywood, bent laminated birch, birch.
circa 1932
60 x 60 x 49 cm (23 5/8 x 23 5/8 x 19 1/4 in.)

Manufactured by O.y. Huonekalu-ja Rakennustyötehdas A.b., Turku, for Artek, Finland. Underside of one leg impressed with 110.

Alvar Aalto

Finnish | B. 1898 D. 1976
In contrast with the functionalism of the International Style (as well the neoclassicism put forward by the Nazi and Soviet regimes), Alvar Aalto brought a refreshing breath of humanism to modern design: "True architecture exists only where man stands in the center," he wrote. Aalto designed furniture in stack-laminated plywood composed of Finnish birch, which was cost-effective and lent warmth to his interiors. Aalto also revived Finnish glass design with his entries in the various Karhula-Iitala glassworks competitions throughout the 1930s.

In 1936 he won first place for a collection of colorful, wavy vases in various sizes titled Eskimoerindens skinnbuxa (The Eskimo Woman’s Leather Breeches). The vases were an immediate success and the most popular size, now known as the "Savoy" vase, is still in production today. Aalto's freeform designs, in harmony with human needs and nature, anticipated the organic modernism of the 1950s and 1960s; in particular, his innovations in bent plywood had a major impact on designers such as Charles and Ray Eames.
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