Art Deco Heywood Wakefield Gilbert Rohde Chairs
Art Deco Heywood Wakefield Gilbert Rohde Chairs
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Art Deco Heywood Wakefield Gilbert Rohde Chairs
Set of Four Art Deco Dining Chairs Designed
by Gilbert Rohde
USA
1931
C2794 A Side Chair Gilbert Rhode Collection, Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, Smithsonian Institution
Bentwood and bent plywood chairs were designed by Gilbert Rohde and manufactured by Heywood Wakefield.
Walnut with orange upholstery. Complementary Heywood Wakefield Table also Available. We have more chairs in this same design, please inquire
Dimensions
16.5″ width x 21″ depth x 32.25″ height
seat height 18″
Condition
Very Good Condition
Preparation, Timing and Shipment
See shipping details on HOME page
Heywood Wakefield
Gilbert Rohde
American, 1894-1944
It was 1930, and Gilbert Rohde had a problem: he was full of fresh new ideas about furniture design but he couldn`t convince any of the traditional manufacturers to take them on.
Then he met D. J. DePree who had also a problem: his company, Herman Miller, needed a major shot in the arm if it was going to survive.
Rohde told DePree that his new ideas made sense for the changing times and for the growing number of people who were living in apartments and smaller houses. “This calls for a different kind of furniture,”
he said.
A deal was struck, and thus began a relationship that would lead Herman Miller into an exciting and challenging new era. `You’re not making furniture anymore, “Rohde told DePree.
“You’re providing a way of life.”
Disdaining ornamentation that often covered up shoddy workmanship, Rohde espoused clean, simple, honest designs. To accommodate smaller living spaces, he created furniture with dual purposes: a card table that turned into a dining table, a settee that folded back into a bed, tables (“rotorettes”) that housed books and other items on rotating shelves. He loved this idea of interchangeability, demonstrated most notably in his Living-Dining Group – individual pieces that could go in either place or a radical departure from the standard living or dining room “suites” purchased at the time.
And with the introduction of Rhode’s Executive Office Group, the company entered the office furniture market.