Preben Fabricius and Jorge Kastholm, footrest BO4391
Footrest model BO4391.
Brushed stainless steel frame, tensioned with braided straps.
Two cushions included, upholstered with vegetable leather and natural canvas.
Frame with burnt Bo-Ex seal.
Exhibition model, with minimal signs of use.
Measurements: 64 x 49 cm; Seat height: 40 cm.
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BID HISTORY
DESCRIPTION
PREBEN FABRICIUS (Denmark, 1931 - 1984) and JORGEN KASTHOLM (Denmark, 1931 - 2007) for Bo-Ex.
Footrest model BO4391.
Brushed stainless steel frame, tensioned with braided straps.
Two cushions included, upholstered with vegetable leather and natural canvas.
Frame with burnt Bo-Ex seal.
Exhibition model, with minimal signs of use.
Measurements: 64 x 49 cm; Seat height: 40 cm.
This model created by designers Preben Fabricius and Jørgen Kastholm consists of a lightweight chrome-plated steel frame in blade, and a stretched fabric that serves as a support for the seat. Its sober, light and elegant design, with simple lines, results in a timeless product that at the same time captures the genuine spirit of the era. It is a piece of furniture that brings together design, quality materials and functionality in a single object.
Danish architect and designer Jørgen Kastholm began his training as a blacksmith, but soon left to pursue furniture design. He attended the Copenhagen School of Interior Design, where he was taught by Finn Juhl. There he also met cabinetmaker Preben Fabricius, who would later become his partner. The two shared a common vision of furniture design, based on minimalism and quality and inspired by the creations of Charles Eames and Mies van der Rohe. Their quest was to achieve an ideal that, by its simplicity, would be timeless. In 1961 they set up a studio together in Gentofte, and four years later they presented their first designs at the Federicia furniture fair, where they attracted the attention of the German furniture manufacturer Alfred Kill. The latter offered them a lucrative contract that allowed them to work freely, so Kastholm and Fabricius moved to Stuttgart with their first designs to start production in Kill's factory. Shortly thereafter, they made the international breakthrough at the 1966 Cologne trade fair, where they showed a complete series of home and office furniture, developed from ten of their original designs. Their minimalist creations, at once attractive and comfortable, were generally steel and leather furniture. The two creators worked together between 1961 and 1968, a seven-year period in which they produced numerous designs now considered classics, such as the Tulip Chair FK 6725, the Grasshopper FK 87 or the Scimitar. Also during this period, their furniture was part of important international exhibitions, held in such prominent centers as the MOMA in New York (1967) or the Musée d'Art Moderne in Paris (1967). Today, designs by Kastholm and Fabricius can be seen at the MACBA in Barcelona, the MOMA in New York, the Musée d'Art Moderne in Paris, the Ringling Museum in Florida, the Art Museum of Brasilia, the Design Center in Stuttgart, the Haus Industriform in Essen, the Neue Sammlung in Munich, the Staatsgemäldesammlung Bayer in Munich, the Kunstindustrimuseum in Berlin, the Kunststofmuseum in Düsseldorf, the World Import Mart Museum and the History + Folkways Museum in Japan and the Museum für Angewandte Kunstgeschichte in Cologne.
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