And Another Thing:
Le Corbusier and The Last Diplodocus
By Skip Ploss
First Published in "The Home Monthly" August 2004
Issue for the Hersam Acorn Press
My wife, daughter and I live in a condominium and we are
lucky enough to have two decks. The inside deck is surrounded
on three sides by our condo with a seven-foot wall closing
off the fourth side. It is nice and private. The second deck
is a traditional, hang-over-the-side deck off our living room.
When we moved in over a year ago, we decided we needed to
furnish these two outside rooms. After three trips, one to
Wal-Mart, one to Home Depot and one to Linens N Things, the
task was accomplished. The inside deck was furnished with
a round table with an authentic mosaic decal (which lasted
one year) in the center and four chairs. The outside deck
gained four Adirondack chairs and two Adirondack ottomans.
An ottoman can mean one of two things, either a citizen of
the Near East empire that was really big before World War
One but really small afterwards, or the small round stool
that my mom had covered in rich maroon vinyl when I was growing
up. She also had one called a hassock which was also small
and round. I have no idea what the difference between the
two is and if anyone knows Id appreciate you letting
me in on it but I digress. The entire adventure cost
around $170 and since we dont spend that much time outside
due to the fear of insect-borne plagues or the risk of skin
cancer, I consider it money well spent.
As the weather turns warmer, thoughts in this house turn
towards our friend Nancys pool and the living that goes
on in and around that swimmin hole. Coincidentally,
this months issue of two national design magazines featured
several pieces of outdoor furniture, which sparked thoughts
of a few other outdoor seating options that have crossed my
path. These are, one would suppose, pieces you would place
by the pool, on the deck (either inside or out), the patio,
take to the beach or, in the case of one chair recommended
by a designer friend of mine, while on safari in Africa. They
each elevate the outdoor chair to new heights both in style
and comfort. All cost a tad more than the $12.99 each I paid
for the deck chairs in the al fresco portion of Chez Ploss.
The
first is famed Italian architect/designer Mario Bellinis
MB1, available in the States through Heller. The MB1 echoes
Bellinis Le Bambole chair of 1972 for B&B Italia.
The MB1 is as massive in appearance as Le Bambole but with
cleaner lines and less of a nod to the overstuffed chair.
It is, basically, an outdoor club chair. The sister piece,
MB5 (one wonders what happened to MB2, MB3 and MB4), is a
pouf which dictionary.com tells me is a rounded ottoman.
Both are one-piece molded polymer (plastic) and the MB1 has
built-in cushions. Heller says that both are suitable for
either office, home, indoor or outdoor. They come in two vibrant
shades of gray specified by Pantone Matching System numbers
(a Pantone number is to a graphic designer what Everest Green
Metallic is to a Mercedes Benz salesman except it makes more
sense). One would imagine that either of the two grays would
be in the neutral side of any decorating palette. The MB1s
style is definitely clean and contemporary. Thoroughly Modern
Bellini. The colors for all of you designers out there are
PMS 412C and 452C. It retails in the $800 range.
Extinct, it would appear, are vast herds of aluminum web
chairs that have dominated the American leisure landscape
for over 50 years. It would seem that, like the dinosaur,
some climactic event has destined them to be a dead-end branch
of the Furnituris leisurati family tree. But have they all
gone? One can still find the last of the species in the bargain
bin at Wal-Mart or the Christmas Tree Shop, clinging to existence
like the last diplodocus at the end of the Jurassic. There
are also indications that they, like the dinosaurs before
them, have simply evolved into something else. In the case
of the dinosaur, evidence points to them having evolved into
birds. In the case of the aluminum web chair, evidence points
to two distinct evolutionary paths. The first is that of the
cloth-covered beach chair with its shortened stature, book
pocket and carry strap. Flocks of them can be seen perched
on top of the frozen food and dairy sections of any Stop &
Shop, like crows on a Nebraska power line. The second and
arguably more successful evolution on the social acceptance
scale is the metal-framed mesh chair. These can be seen at
virtually every pool side, every deck and patio in Fairfield
County and are comfortable and airy (the mesh allows airflow
to your caboose).
A
more interesting piece is the folding English Mahogany Roorkhee
Campaign Chair by FM Allen in New York and introduced to me
by client and friend, designer Tyler Tinsworth. FM Allen has
an entire line of reproduction English campaign furniture
from the unique to the downright silly. The Roorkhee Chair
(named in honor of the city where the Indian Army Corps of
Engineers was located in British Colonial India) is definitely
one of the unique ones. It is a wood, canvas and leather affair
that requires the sittee to put together the various
arms, braces, slings and belts to form a pretensioned masterwork.
The Roorkhee, unlike most folding camp furniture, actually
adapts well to uneven terrain and becomes more stable the
heavier the person sitting in it (one can only ponder the
previously unreachable levels of stability achieved with me
sitting in it). Equally at home on a screened porch or in
your office, this is a chair that is the focus, at least at
first, of most of the conversations taking place around it.
When one looks at the complexity of the Roorkhee chair and
compares it to say the folding directors chair, one
has to wonder why the English had to make things so darn complicated.
At first I wrote it off to the fact that obviously the English
campaign furniture was invented first and that the directors
chair came much later, say when the motion picture director
was invented by Thomas Edison (this led to his inventing the
motion picture as an excuse to get rid of all those people
walking around his living room looking at him through frames
made with their hands). That theory was dispelled by the fact
that the French had invented the modern directors
chair in the 1890s as a folding chair for their generals.
One can imagine legions of French Generals dArmée
sitting on the back porch of the Maginot Line during the spring
of 1940, sipping cognac in directors chairs with Welcome
to France stenciled on the back.
According to Nicholas A. Brawer, author of British Campaign
Furniture: Elegance Under Canvas, 1740-1914 (Harry N. Abrams,
2001), The Roorkhee Chair blended the Elegance of the
outgoing Victorian Age camp furniture with the more utilitarian
style of the new Edwardian Era camp furniture. The design
allowed them to be folded compactly while retaining the highest
level of luxury and style that typified being British.
The fact that the French had invented the other type probably
had nothing to do with it. Whatever the reason, the Roorkhee
chair attracts attention like no directors chair could.
Its very cool. Marcel Breuer thought so (the Roorkhee
inspired his famous Wassily chair c1925) as did Le Corbusier
(his Basculant chair, 1928, is a reflection of it) and Kaare
Klint (as seen in his safari chair of 1933). The Roorkhee
retails for $550. Dear Santa...
The
silly piece is the Victorian Caned Satin-Birch Travelling
Chair (for around $2,500). This folding, legless chair has
handles positioned fore and aft so that your bearers can carry
you, seated at a delightful angle, through the brush. Oh
look Monty, is that a lion eating the china bearer?
Standard equipment includes massive iron rings
attached in place of legs perhaps designed to lash it
to a wagon or elephant howdah (not a pachydermal greeting
but the harness that was strapped to its back where
everything from Victorian Caned Satin-Birch Travelling Chairs
to small buildings were fastened). Genevieve dear, could
you pop down to the market for some mustard? You can take
the elephant. This is a beautiful work of art; one could
imagine hanging it, at elephant back height, from the ceiling.
It is a brilliant conversation piece but silly as a usable
chair.
Of
all of the choices both retro and contemporary that are available
to the consumer in the outdoor seating market today, the one
that inspires the warmest warm and fuzzies is the ubiquitous
1950s metal lawn chair. You know the one. They had (and still
do) stamped metal seats molded to fit the lower district of
the human anatomy and scalloped backs with pipe-like arms
that started at the backrest, came forward, then bent downs
to form the front (and only) legs, bent to the rear at the
ground level, flowing back to a right angle and meeting somewhere
south of your posterior.
Although it is difficult to find a definitive history of
the metal lawn chair (or motel chair as they were also known
due to their popularity in the drive-up lodging industry),
they are thought, by some, to have been designed by industrial
designer John Gordon Rideout of Cleveland, Ohio. Originals
are available on eBay, and there are many companies making
reproductions. Older examples tend to run in the $45-$125
range with new ones selling for around $60.
It is the metal lawn chair that occupies my earliest recollections
of outdoor furniture. My great grandfather built a large stone
lodge in the mountains of West Virginia during the 30s.
The lodge has a covered flagstone porch overlooking the lake
and mountains beyond. Lined up against the house were six
of the scalloped-back lawn chairs that my grandparents and
great-grandparents would sit in while my mom and her siblings
played in the yard. During the 60s and 70s, it
was Moms turn to watch from the aged green metal chairs
as my brother, sister and I played with our cousins. As kids,
we made a connection with the adults when we sat in those
chairs, we could join in their conversations about politics,
lumbering, and when we were going to drain the pond again.
As I got older, I came to enjoy just sitting on the porch
with a good book and a glass of iced tea while the chair gently
rocked back and forth. I still do.
Resources: all open new windows
FM Allen:
www.fmallen.com
Heller:
www.helleronline.com
Metal
Lawn Chairs (go to www.yahoo.com and search for "metal
lawn chair")
Care to discuss? Go to And
Another Thing Live!
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