Previous Next
35346826-(100).jpg
35346826-(10).jpg
35346826-(09).jpg
35346826-(12).jpg
35346826-(01).jpg
35346826-(11).jpg
35346826-(13).jpg

Gerrit Rietveld

Auction Lot 35346826
GERRIT RIETVELD (Utrecht, 1888 - Utrecht,1964).
"Red and Blue Chair.
Wood and fabric.
Follows the original design of 1918.
Measurements: 88 x 79 x 60,5 cm; 33,5 cm (seat height).

Last Bid : 1300
ITEM SOLD
Auction complete
BID HISTORY

DESCRIPTION

GERRIT RIETVELD (Utrecht, 1888 - Utrecht,1964).
"Red and Blue Chair.
Wood and fabric.
Follows the original design of 1918.
Measurements: 88 x 79 x 60,5 cm; 33,5 cm (seat height).

"Rood-blauwe stoel" (The Red Blue Chair) is an icon of international design, designed in 1917 by Gerrit Rietveld. It represents one of the first explorations of the De Stijl art movement in three dimensions. The original chair had a natural finish and was later painted in the De Stijl primary color palette of black, gray and white. However, it was later changed to resemble the paintings of Piet Mondrian when Rietveld came into contact with the artist's work in 1918. Rietveld eventually joined the De Stijl movement in 1919. Because of its extremely simplified conception, this model was conceived to be mass-produced. The chair is currently on display at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The son of a cabinetmaker, Rietveld learned his trade in his father's workshop. In 1918, Rietveld started his own furniture factory while studying architecture. In the summer of 1918 he designed the Red and Blue Chair, initially with a natural wood finish, although in 1924, after joining De Stijl, he changed its finish to the colors that gave it its name. In 1919 he begins to collaborate with Truus Schröder - Schräder. In 1923 he participates in the Stiljiana architecture exhibition of L'Effort Moderne in Paris, and collaborates with Vilmos Huzar in the design for the Berlin art exhibition. In 1924, together with Schröder, he designed his best-known architectural work: the Rietveld Schröder House in Utrecht. The house has a conventional ground floor, the upper part being radical, in which the walls are sliding, so that the space can be modified. The design looks like a three-dimensional realization of a Mondrian painting. Rietveld broke with the De Stijl movement in 1928 and joined the Nieuwe Zakelijkheid. That same year he joined the International Congress of Modern Architecture (CIAM). In 1934 he designed the Zig-Zag chair and began the project for the van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, for which he only made sketches. He begins a very socially involved period, especially with his social architecture and with the design of cheap and easy-to-make furniture (Krat series). In 1951 he designs a retrospective exhibition on the De Stijl movement in Amsterdam, Venice and New York. In 1954 his first retrospective exhibition is held at the Centraal Museum dedicated to his architecture. He is considered one of the most important architects of Holland.

HELP


Bidding by Phone 932 463 241

Buy in Setdart

Sell in Setdart

Payments

Logistics

Remember that bids placed in the last few minutes may extend the end of the auction,
thus allowing enough time for other interested users to place their bids. Remember to refresh your browser in the last minutes of any auction to have all bidding information fully updated.

Also in the last 3 minutes, if you wish, you can place
consecutive bids to reach the reserve price.

Newsletter

Would you like to receive our newsletter?

Setdart sends, weekly and via e-mail, a newsletter with the most important news. If you have not yet requested to receive our newsletter, you can do so by filling in the following form.


SETDART ONLINE SL, as data controller, will treat your data in order to send you our newsletter with commercial news about our services. You can access, rectify and delete your data, as well as exercise other rights by consulting the additional and detailed information on data protection in our privacy policy.