October 12th, 2010 by Zachary Sachs
In Graphis 230 (March/April 1984), Steve Heller reports on Seymour Chwast’s latest project, experimental chair designs for Georg Kovacs, Inc.—
Breaking [the conventions of furniture making] by emphasizing concept over comfort meant that wild colours and patterns triumphed, without relation to interior surroundings. Chwast’s retrograde modern designs—which are akin to the absurdist furniture of the internationally celebrated Memphis design group—are sculptural fantasies. The occasional chairs he has now designed are primarily conversation pieces, especially for the home where no particular style dominates. But, most accurately, they are toys on a grand scale and ones with are reflective of the sly, playful side of this artist’s odd life style.
The slides are included in the Pushpin slide directory, series 7 in the Seymour Chwast Collection. The chairs made me think of Memphis too, but only superficially: their integration, which is based entirely on Chwast’s graphic sensibility, resists function just as it achieves visual unity. The physical forms of the furniture fit their graphic patterns in ways that may not be perfectly suitable for comfortable furniture but nonetheless suit each other more than a psychedelic print on a Barcelona chair. Their form and decorative elements are measured against each other, and in concert achieve a kind of irreducibility that I don’t associate with Memphis or postmodern design in general.
A treasure trove of art and graphics from The Milton Glaser Design Archives. Rare, unseen printed work, original art, and drafts for design and illustration by Glaser, Heinz Edelmann, Seymour Chwast, George Tscherny, James McMullan, and others. For even more design ephemera and art from the School of Visual Arts, see also http://containerlist.glaserarchives.org.
Garbageman
January 13, 2011
I know it sounds crazy, but when you ask 99.9% of Americans, “Who made the animation in [...]
So these never made it past the mini-model phase? So good!
I shot an email to Seymour asking him about it and I think the only place these guys were ever seen was Graphis. … well, and now the Picturebox site.
That is scary. Seymour! Show this stuff more often!
The real questions are:
1) What is Seymour’s current favorite chair to recline on?
2) What is his favorite chair to doodle in?
If you can get those answers you’ll get a PictureBox badge of honor.