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KNOLL AU LOUVRE Massimo Vignelli and Herbert Matter
Massimo Vignelli (designer), Herbert Matter (color photography): KNOLL AU LOUVRE: CATALOG OF THE EXHIBITION HELD AT PAVILION DE MARSAN, MUSEE DES ARTS DECORATIFS 107, RUE DE RIVOLI, PARIS, JANUARY 12 TO MARCH 12, 1972. NYC: Knoll International/Chanticleer Press, 1971. First edition. A fine softcover book in a stiff, printed wrappers: a superior copy of this easily-abused volume, designed by Massimo Vignelli. Text in English. Interior unmarked and very clean. Out-of-print.
11.5 x 11.75 book with approx. 68 pages and many color
photographs by Herbert Matter, produced specifically for this catalog of
the Exhibition Held at Pavillon De Marsan Musee Des Arts Decoratifs 107,
Rue De Rivoli, Paris January 12 to March 12, 1972.
Contains work by Mies van der Rohe, Harry Bertoia, Marcel Breuer,
Florence knoll Bassett, Eero Saarinen, Hans Wegner, Don Albinson, Warren
platner, Richard Schultz, Massimo Vignelli, and others.
For those of you wondering what the fuss is all about, here's a brief
history of Knoll: Hans Knoll founded his eponymous company in New York in
1938, just one year after immigrating from Germany. He must already have
had big dreams, for he posted a sign saying "Factory No. 1" outside the
single second-story room he rented on East 72nd Street. Hans's father was
the pioneering German manufacturer of modern furniture, Walter.
Establishing the H.G. Knoll Furniture Company was Hans's declaration of
independence.
Hans Knoll, born and raised in Stuttgart, had been educated in England
and Switzerland during an era of aesthetic and social revolution. An
admirer of the Bauhaus, he was familiar with its giants of design and
architecture, including Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer, and Ludwig Mies van
der Rohe. Stuttgart, one of the breeding grounds for the crop of new ideas
generated in during the 1920s, hosted many exhibitions of the Deutscher
Werkbund, a government organization that promoted German design and
architecture. Such were the influences on young Hans Knoll. By the time he
crossed the Atlantic at age 24, he had formulated the credo that would
distinguish his company: Modern architects need modern furniture for their
modern buildings.
Many of those modern architects had left Germany before Knoll. In 1933,
the Nazis had shut down the Bauhaus, a hothouse of ideas that nurtured some
of the 20th century's greatest architects, designers, and artists. Mies Van
der Rohe, Breuer, and Gropius, among others, fled to the United States,
transplanting the philosophies of architecture that have evolved into
American design culture as we know it. In 1932, the year before the Nazis
sparked the exodus of many of Germany's great young designers, George W.
Booth established the Academy of Art at Cranbrook, in Bloomfield Hills,
Michigan. He selected Eliel Saarinen, a Finnish èmigrè and noted modern
architect, as president. Cranbrook, as the academy came to be known, had
much in common with the Bauhaus. Both were schools and residential
communities for practicing artists, founded on the utopian ideal that
aesthetic values would tame the chaos of industrial society. Each was
committed to an underlying competence in craft and craftsmanship.
Cranbrook's faculty and graduates, like those of the Bauhaus, had a major
impact on 20th century art, design and architecture, and many later became
associated with the Knoll company.
America's isolation from the modern movement began to dissipate in 1940
when two young American instructors from Cranbrook - Eero Saarinen, Eliel's
son, and Charles Eames-won an international competition for furniture
design conducted by New York's Museum of Modern Art. Since it was
unprecedented for Americans to achieve honors in the field of furniture
design, Eames and Saarinen and their furniture prototypes began to change
the perception that only Europe produced superior designers. When the
postwar building boom erupted in an explosion of homes and office
buildings, it was the architects of the Bauhaus who were selected to design
corporate America. In the second half of the 20th century the faculty and
graduates of both the Bauhaus and Cranbrook helped set the standard for
contemporary architecture and design around the world.
During the early 1940s, Knoll had begun to think about developing a base
for manufacturing outside New York City. An excellent business manager, he
began investigating eastern Pennsylvania because of its concentrated
population of German-Americans and Pennsylvania Dutch. The community had a
tradition of meticulous craftsmanship and a potential supply of healthy
young laborers returning from the war who no longer wanted to farm. Knoll
made his first major investment: a former planing mill in Pennsburg, near
Quakertown.
During the war, Knoll had met and hired Florence Schust, a young space
planner and designer who later helped Knoll achieve his vision of modern
furniture and interiors for modern buildings. As a student at Cranbrook,
Schust, had became friends with the Saarinen family and spent summers with
them at their home in Hvitrask, Finland. She also toured Europe, visiting
the great architectural sites. She later studied at the Architectural
Association in London at the suggestion of the great Finnish architect
Alvar Aalto, and spent two years there under the influence of Le Corbusier.
At the outbreak of the war, Schust returned to the U.S., apprenticing
with Gropius and Breuer until she entered the Armour Institute
(subsequently the Illinois Institute of Technology) to complete her degree.
There, Mies van der Rohe, the head of the school of architecture, had a
profound effect on her design approach. Schust moved to New York after
graduation and worked in several architectural offices where, as the only
female, she was assigned the few interiors projects that came along.
When Schust joined Knoll's company, she considered herself an interior
designer with "opinions" about furniture-not, strictly speaking, a
furniture designer. The two had a difficult time finding work involving
contemporary design; when they did, production proved problematic because
materials were limited by wartime shortages. Nevertheless, they persisted.
Knoll and Schust married in 1946. They also formalized their business
partnership, which became Knoll Associates Inc. Florence's keen eye for
design, Hans's knowledge of furniture manufacturing and marketing, and
their limitless energy proved to be a winning combination. Florence played
a critical role in the company's development. She championed the Bauhaus
approach to furniture design: to offer objects that reflected design
excellence, technological innovation and mass production. Together, the
Knolls searched out and nurtured talented designers. They believed strongly
that designers should be credited by name and paid royalties for their
designs. Knoll continues that tradition today.
In the early 1950s, Knoll acquired a building in East Greenville,
Pennsylvania, to supplement the facility in Pennsburg. Today, East
Greenville serves as Knoll's headquarters, and remains the company's
largest manufacturing facility.
After the death of Hans Knoll in 1955, Florence Knoll took over as
president and continued to exert her influence on all aspects of design,
while leaving business matters to others. In 1958, she married Harry Hood
Bassett, and began dividing her time between New York and Florida. In 1965,
she resigned from the company, withdrawing from the industry completely but
leaving the company in the hands of those she had trained and inspired.
out of stock
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