Current Price
around
$3800 in fabric
After winning the Museum of Modern Art Organic Design Competition with
Charles Eames for their experiments with bent plywood in 1941, Eero
Saarinen was eager to continue exploring the possibilities of a chair
that achieved comfort through the shape of its shell, not the depth of
its cushioning. Initially, he began the investigation with designs for
smaller fiberglass task chairs, but changed direction when Florence
Knoll approached him and asked, “Why not take the bull by the horns and
do the big one first? I want a chair that is like a basket full of
pillows…something I can curl up in.” While that’s not exactly where
Saarinen ended up, the suggestion inspired one of the most iconic, and
comfortable, chairs of the modern furniture movement.
Like many of Saarinen’s furniture designs, the Womb Chair required
production techniques and materials still in the infancy of their
existence. Saarinen and Florence Knoll found a boat builder in New
Jersey who was experimenting with fiberglass and resin to help develop
manufacturing methods for the new chair. Florence Knoll: “He was very
skeptical. We just begged him. I guess we were so young and so
enthusiastic he finally gave in and worked with us. We had lots of
problems and failures until they finally got a chair that would work.”
These are still manufactured today and sold through Knoll.
|
|