GLAESER, Ludwig. Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe - Furniture
GLAESER, Ludwig. Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe - Furniture
GLAESER, Ludwig. Ludwig Mies Van Der Rohe - Furniture
Author
Date
1977
Publisher
The Museum of Modern Art
ISBN
0870705555
Exhibition URL
www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/1801
- - ,
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
Furnitureand FurnitureDrawings
from the Design Collection and the Mies van der Rohe Archive
By Ludwig Giaeser
Copyright ® 1977 by The Museum of Modern Art.
All rights reserved.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 76-24509
ISBN 0-87070-555-5.
The Museum of Modern Art, 11 West 53 Street,
New York,New York 10019
Design: Massimo Vignelli
Third printing 1979
Contents
4 Acknowledgments
5 Preface
7 Introduction
19 Catalogue
20 Side Chair 1927
22 Side Chair with Arms 1927
24 Stool 1927
26 Lounge Chair 1931
28 Lounge Chair with Arms 1931
30 Coffee Table 1927
32 Chaise Longue 1931
34 Chaise Longue with Spring Frame 1931
37 Reclining Frame 1932
42 Tubular Support Elements 1930-34
44 Couch 1930
47 Barcelona Chair 1929
51 Barcelona Ottoman 1929
53 Chaise Longue Studies 1934
55 TugendhatChair 1929-30
58 TugendhatChair 1930-31 and Variations 1936
60 TugendhatCoffee Table 1930
62 Brno Chair 1929-30
64 Brno Chair 1929-30 and Variations 1931-35
68 Bentwood Chair Studies 1933-34
75 Bentwood Frame Studies 1934-35
77 Conchoidal Chair Studies Early 1940s
86 Bibliography
Acknowledgments
This surveyof furniture by Ludwig Mies van der Roheis the '
second in a series devoted to important groups of material in
the Museum's Design Collection.
—Arthur Drexler
Director
Architecture and Design
Ludwig Mies van der Roheand Lilly Reich on board an
excursion boat on the Wannsee,a lake near Berlin. 1933
(photograph by Howard Dearstyne,one of their students)
Introduction
Thearchitect as designer is not as much a twentieth-century 1907, had been appointed directorof the decorative arts
phenomenonas the eulogists of the modern movementhave museum's school in Berlin,had quickly acquired a reputation
madeus believe.Evenwhen furniture was still the domain of for his furniture designs. Mies's crafts background and personal
craftsmen,an architect would include interiors in his design, inclinations made him at first follow the traditional approach
extendingthe rocaille ornaments of wall surfacesto three- and treatthe interiors of his early housesas parts of the entire
dimensionalconsoles and to freestanding chairs and tables. architectural scheme.The recognizedantecedents of modern
Admittedly,in these cases he was the designer of ensembles, furniture by Charles RennieMackintoshor FrankLloyd Wright
homogeneousenvironments,ratherthan of isolated industrial were designed for specific purposes.The few exceptions,
individual pieces broughtout by avant-gardeestablishments
prototypes.Also,he had craftsmen, on whose intuitive
capabilities he could rely,to interprethis undetailed such as the Wiener Werkstatten,were produced only in limited
suggestions.Therewas no need for full sets of working series. Moreover,the question of whether the future belonged to
drawings nor for constant efforts to reinvent dovetailing. the designer of industrial prototypes or to the creator of unique
masterpieces was still a hotly debated issue,especially at the
Thefirstdepartures from this happy practice occurred in the Werkbund meeting in Cologne in 1914.
first half of the nineteenth century with architects such as Karl
The defenderofthe artist's eternal prerogativeswas Henryvan
FriedrichSchinkel,the German neoclassicist, who recognized
the potential of prefabricated building elements as well as the de Velde,the leading figure of the Art Nouveaumovement.
needfor universallyusable chairs. The century is characterized Whether or notthis brief movementdeservesto be credited
by well-meant efforts to help the crafts catch up with industry with the watershed role that modern art historians haveoften
throughthe establishment of decorative arts schools and accorded it, its exponentsdid show a most modern responseto
museums.Typically,Martin Gropius,the Bauhausfounder's an emerging life style.The aspirationsof the new generation,
greatuncle, built a decorative arts museum in Berlin and more clearly reflected in the movement'sGerman name,
directed the decorative arts school there. Jugendstil (style of youth),were not less valid for having been
accessible only to those who could afford to havetheir new
In 1907, continuing the significant coincidences that preceded milieux custom designed. Vande Velde had set the example of
the adventof the modern movement,Walter Gropiusjoined the the totally designed environment,which, in his house in Uccle,
office of PeterBehrens,who had movedto Berlin that year to included even the garments of its female occupants. But he
becomethe chief design advisor to Germany'sgiant electrical also revealedthe dichotomy between the vision of a new life
corporation,Allgemeine Elektrizitats Gesellschaft.Also in the style and its universaldissemination which the younger
sameyear,architects, artists, educators,officials, and generation felt called upon to resolve.
industrialistsfounded the DeutscherWerkbund,the famous
associationwhich, through its exhibitions and publications, Howevervaried the political convictions of the founders of
becameone of the most effective promotersof modernist modern architecture were,they sharedcertain Utopian ideals
ideas.Its original goal, however,was only to raise aesthetic which they hoped would reconcile their aesthetic sensitivities
standardsand thereby increaseexportation of German with social realities.They also sharedthe belief that remedies
industrialand craft products. Bridging both worlds,the versatile could be provided only by modern industrial technology.These
Behrbns,who had started out as a painter,became one of the were "the methods of our time,"advocated by Mies in his
first industrial designers in the modern sense of the term. The apodictic statement in 1923, that would enable the modern
rangeof his work, from type faces to factory halls,explains the architect to "create form out of the natureof our tasks."Gropius,
attractionhis office held for the future protagonists of modern who had proclaimed a "return to the crafts" in his Bauhaus
architecture.It is also symptomatic that Le Corbusier'sbrief manifesto of 1919 —hardly an unexpected reactionto the
staythere,in 1912, occurred in connection with a surveyhe was technological horrorsof the First World War—reaffirmed his
undertakingon the state of industrialization in the European original position in a memorandum to the Bauhausmasters in
building trades. 1922.They had again raised the question of whether they were
to produce individual pieces without regardto the outside
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe'smotive may havebeen similar world or in contact with industry.Gropiushastened to clarify: I
when he joined Behrens'soffice in 1908, although it is more seek unity in the fusion, not in the separation,of these ways of
likely that what he discoveredthere were less the tendencies of life."After accusing them of a "misunderstood 'return to nature'
an incipient modernism than unique opportunities to acquire doctrine of Rousseau's,"he concluded, "Today'sarchitect has
specific skills. This was, in his own words,the reasonfor forfeited his righttoexist. . . .The engineeron the other hand,
choosing Bruno Paulas his first employer after his arrival in unhamperedby aesthetics and historical inhibitions, has
Berlinin 1905. Trainedas a stone mason in his father's arrived at clear and organic forms...." The last remark seems
workshopand in conventionalarchitectural offices in his home to echo Le Corbusier'sverdict in his 1920 article, "Troisrappels
town,Aachen,Mies felt badly preparedto detail wood interiors a MM.les architectes,"that "the American engineers eradicate
and furniture.Paul,another painter turned designer,who, in the dying architecture with their calculations."
Armchair by Marcel Breuer.1925. Tubularsteel chrome-plated
frame,with canvas seat,back, and armrests.The Museumof
Modern Art (229.34)
8 It is a matter of speculation whether the First World War denominator-a meaning they shared and the consumer
postponed oraccelerated modernistdevelopment. In Germany recognized.In order to convey this new status of sign and
the defeat had created a climate that not only generated the message,objects had to be designed not only with new forms
notorious intellectual ferment of the 1920s butalsoone in but also for new materials,and at that time hardly any other
which the predominanceof Socialist parties and labor unions material seemed more effective fora chair than exposed metal,
produced political circumstances favoringthe new with a hard,reflective surfacethat would reinforceits
architecture.With a recoveringeconomy,the second half of the technological character.It was supposed to make a statement
decade saw an increasing numberof modern buildings about functional objectivity (lacking a better translation of the
actually constructed, particularly in the area of public housing. then much used Germanterm Sachl/chkeit) as well as the
Like the other visionaries who had become activists, Mies had progressiverejection of the nooks and crannies and the dust-
movedfrom the Novembergruppe,the revolutionaryartist's collecting upholstery of furniture of the past.
association with which he had exhibited his first modern
projects,to the Werkbund.As the association's vice president, It is hard for anyone today to realizehow obsessed the modern
he soon had an opportunity to take charge of the Weissenhof ' revolutionarieswere with all aspects of hygiene. It was not just
Housing Exhibition in Stuttgart,in 1927, to which he invited all a rationalizationbut a firmly held belief that the ever-larger
the leading modern architects in Europe.By that time the picture windows would guarantee healthier living conditions.
Werkbund movementwas dominated by architects, another Forthe same reason,the flat roofsdecreed by modern
indication of the shift from design individualism to professional architecture were to serveas sun decks and exercise facilities,
pragmatism.
which, for instance,in a preliminary scheme for Le Corbusier's
Villa Stein at Garches,even included a jogging track. The
In their task of bringing a bravenew world into existence,
psycho-history of modern furniture still has to be written, but
furniture was at first not a primary concern to these architects one can easily imagine the childhood experiences shared by
especially since it was no longer a question of designing the generationof Gropius,Mies,and Le Corbusier.The
unique sets but of specifying mass-produced items. These bourgeois interiors of the 1880s, the decade of their births,
were not available,with perhaps a few exceptons such as must haveappeared,from a toddler's vantage point, like a rain
Thonet'sfunctional-looking bentwood chairs. Although Le forest: innumerable richly machine-carved legs of pseudo-
Corbusier had found them acceptable for his programmatic Renaissancechairs and tables, tasseled plush velvet
Esprit NouveauPavilionat the DecorativeArts Exhibition in upholstery and curtains,which kept rooms in a permanent
Paris,in 1925, as industrial products they certainly did not penumbra.The greatclean-up the founders of modern
project the technological image his machine a vivre architecture were to conduct assumed all the dimensions of a
demanded. The exhibition, on the other hand,provided a classic confrontation between generationsand, as such, was
disquieting lesson for progressivecontemporaries on how also steeped in adolescent morality.Stucco facades, stuffy
easily traditional craftsmen and furniture designers could interiors,and ornament per se were seen as equal to bourgeois
adopt a modern idiom and convert it into a successful fashion. hypocrisy,while beauty,if still acceptable at all, was only valid
Indeed,in only a few years these polished pseudo-Cubist as the "splendor of truth,"in the apocryphal words that Mies
ensembles would be joined by groups of tubular steel chairs. liked to quote.
Fortunately,there was the Bauhaus,and, while it was not the One can extend these speculations one step further by
only place where genuinely modern design began to emerge, it considering the inventionof the cantilever chair as a symbolic
was undoubtedly the most seminal. Innovativeproducts,from event as well as a technological feat.Admittedly,the
table lamps to wall paper,found a growing market,which the continuous loop of the tubular steel frame is a logical result of
Bauhausitself had helped to create.This was,of course,not the material properties and production techniques.The smooth
only due to Gropius'sentrepreneurialskills but to a more horizontalsurfacesallow the chair to glide overthe floor,
fundamental responseto a new,egalitarian lifestyle,which providing the kind of mobility so dear to modern man.The
found wide acceptance among a generationthat regarded minimal seat plane appears suspended above the ground,
itself as the first born into a truly modern century.Thus,when creating an impressionof weightlessnessappropriate to an
the implements of this new life became available they were age that conquered the air—in fact, some of the first passenger
affordable—in 1931,the price of the Mies side chair with airplanes were equipped with tubular steel chairs. Most
leatherslings was sixty-eight marks (or sixty-one 1976
significant of all, however,seems to be the "leglessness" that
dollars), which is about one-sixth the current list price-
eliminated all associations with the archetypal chair,the
because they were industrial products.This alone,however, symbolic seat of paternal authority.The abolition of the solid,
would not haveguaranteed the dissemination of Bauhaus ' rooted supports on which the primeval ruler elevated himself
designs;their successrestedon a conceptualqualitythat
above his subjects amounted to a democratizing gesture
made all products,howeverdiverse in purpose and execution, which rejected past hierarchical orders.Whether plausible or
compatible with each other by virtue of their common
not,such interpretationsconfirm many doubts that the forms of
gavea brief, illustrated account of steel furniture development. 9
the first modern chairs resultedautomatically from to use He first listed two American cantilever designs against which
Mies's phrase—"the methods of our time." he had to defend his patent claim : a chaise longue,of 1904,
and a chair by Nolan,of 1922, both of which had frames of steel
Aswith any other style,the modern vocabulary was relatedto
bars bent at the front into a coil that exploited the spring
earlierforms,its reductionist principles notwithstanding,which
principle for resilience.He then mentioned Breuer'schairs as
led to the Bauhauspreoccupation with geometric the first to employ tubular steel; these, however,were still rigid.
fundamentals.But even the pureforms of cube, cone, and Finally,he described Stam's gas-pipe chair,of 1926, and the
cylinderhad already been exploited in the past to improvedversion,of 1927, produced for the Weissenhof
monumentalize,for instance,the visionary projects of the
Exhibition.The latter was not resilient,as the curved sections of
Frenchrevolutionaryarchitects at the end of the eighteenth the tubular frame had been reinforcedby the insertion of solid
century.The cube is, of course,the logical geometric shape for
bars which, reportedly,did not preventthe cantilever from
a chair,as Adolf Loos and Josef Hoffmann had already sagging. Mies,therefore,concluded, "I was the first to have
demonstratedwith their club chairs. The cube is also the basic
exploited consistently the spring quality of steel tubes. I made
shapeof Marcel Breuer'sWassily chair,the first tubular steel
the experiments in early summerof 1927 and applied fora
chair,although the volume's outline is merely circumscribed by
patent on August 24, 1927." Mies succeeded in this, as in so
the frame.This approach of reducing a chair to its structural
many other cases, because he not only recognizedthe
diagram is already present in his earlier children s furniture and
potential of an idea but also pursued it patiently down to the
derivedfrom similar de Stijl exercises by Gerrit Rietveld.It is
last technical detail. He certainly had no past experience with
alsoone of those historical coincidences that Breuerbeganto
the material nor with its method of production,the seamless
developthis chair in Dessauin the same year,1925, in which Le
tubing process introduced by the Mannesmannworks in 1886,
Corbusierrehabilitated Thonet's bentwood chairs in his Esprit
the year of Mies's birth.The process allowed rods of plain
NouveauPavilionin Paris.The transposition from one bent
carbon steel to be drawn cold into tubes with thin walls—those
tubularmaterial to the other is as obvious as the anecdote is
generally specified by Mies had an external diameter of 24
believable: Breuerhitupon steel tubing when, having acquired
/i6
15 millimeters ( inch) and a wall thickness of 2 millimeters
nc
16
h) his first bicycle, he contemplated the perfection of its handle (y i -which were not only extremely light but also highly
bars. resilient.Moreover,the tubes could be bent by hand, making the
productionof a small seriespossibleeven in blacksmiths
It seemsonly naturalthat Breuer'sidea should havetaken hold
shops. Eventually,mass production relied on ingenious
in The Netherlands,the bicycle country of the continent. As fast
machines that could not only shape tubular frames at great
as the newstraveled on the modern circuits, so was it exploited,
speed between adjustable rollerelements but also preventany
and,to judge from the 1975 steel furniture exhibition in deformations in narrowcurve segments,through the insertion
Amsterdam,by the end of the 1930s, about one hundred
modelsof tubular steel furniture had been produced in The of a single-ball mandrel.
Netherlands.Moreover,it was also a Dutch architect, Mart Stam, Fortunately,Miesdid nothave to waitfor technology to catch up
who would enter history as the inventorof the cantilever chair.
with his inventionbut could unveil usable models at the
He is said to haveassembled,for a family member in 1926, a
opening of the Weissenhof Exhibition in July 1927. Several
prototypeout of gas pipes and fittings which, by intention or by
rooms in his apartment house,a four-storyslab crowning the
virtue of this improvisation,was to be a camping chair capable
exhibition terrain,werefurnished with his cantilever chairs, with
of being dismantled. One of the foreign architects invited to
and without arms and fitted with separate leatherslings for
build a houseat the Weissenhof Exhibition,Stam recognized
back and seat.As companion pieces, Mies had designed a
the problem of how to presentthe model houses not only fully
tubular stool with a leathersling seat and a coffee table with a
equipped but also with exemplary modern furniture.At a
circular glass top supported by two U-shapedframes crossing
meeting—the only one attended by Le Corbusier—in each other at the bottom. In their reduction to essentials,the
Stuttgart'sHotel Marquartsteinon November22, 1926, Stam
designs are proverbiallyMiesian,and their clarity owes as
mentioned his cantilever chair,supposedly making a sketch on much to the almost diagrammatic separationof the supported
the back of of the wedding announcementof the painter Willi
and supporting elements as to the pure geometry of the
Baumeister.This now lost evidence was, until recently,in the delineating forms.Composed exclusively of circular or straight
possessionof the Stuttgart architect, Bodo Rasch,who horizontalsand verticals-the slightly inclined back portion of
included Mies's cantilever chair in a 1927 publication,
the chair frame is the only concession to human anatomy—the
crediting the idea to Stam.Mies neverdenied Stam s priority,
forms are still indebted to Bauhausfundamentals.This may
and claimed only a technical innovationthat gave his chairs
also explain why these chairs havenot achieved the same
resilience. timelessness as his later classics.
Inanswerto a letter sentoutby Nikolaus Pevsnerin 1935 in
It i s another matter of speculation whether these first chairs had
preparationfor his Enquiry into Industrial Art in England, Mies
"Velvetand Silk Cafe" installation by Mies van der Roheand
Lilly Reich.Mode der Dame Exhibition,Berlin. 1927 (from
Cahiers d'Art, vol. 3, 1928)
chair WilhelmLehmbruck.Yet,whateverthe extent of his talents may achieved universalapplicability, which Mies understoodas
to Lilly havebeen,he neverseemed to havetrusted them and being good rather than interesting.
oatentfo:suppressedtheir expressionthroughout his life. A decade after
ideaof thedesignof the conchoidal chairs he allowed a model to be Theseself-imposed rigorousrestraints,of course,affected only
:k and madeof the large folded metal sculptures he envisioned in the the final stages of thedesign process and, as the chair
ousbut centerof the two reflecting pools in front of the Seagram drawings so clearly demonstrate,did not diminish his initial
m the Building,but would not accede to theirexecution, although inventiveness.Second only to Mies's original imagination is his
theyhadbeen admired by those who had seen the preliminary unique, inborn sense of proportion,which was effective even
studies. within the limited margins of the given anatomical dimensions.
the What appealed most to those who, at the beginning of the
Miesalwayscherished his privacy and had let only those who 1930s, had converted to the consolidated modernism best
ure workedor studied with him observethe creative process, described by the Germanterm Neue Sachlichkeit, was the
makingthe world believe that the Barcelonachair had sprung understatedelegance of his designs. Ennoblingthe simplicity
lis in fromhis head,like Athena,in its final perfection.The furniture and clarity of their forms, it made Mies chairs classics in a
on in designsreveal,perhaps better than any other aspect of Mies's matter of years.The models brought out again after the Second
en work,the rangeof his imagination but also,one is tempted to World War were the basic versionsstripped of such removable
heets, say,the moral imperativesthat guided the long process of details as the arms of the 1927 side chair,which were liable to
nture elimination."I often throw things out I like very much. They are reintroducea period flavor.They not only remained in demand
'anced dearto my heart,but when I havea betterconviction, a clearer at a time when the word Bauhausacquired a distinctly
i's idea. . . then I follow the clearer idea,"Mies declared in the pejorativemeaning,but the Barcelonachair even became a
"ConversationsRegardingthe Futureof Architecture"that were status symbol with a high incidence of poor imitations.When
the time had come for the 1920s to be rediscovered-resulting
nrtypes recordedin 1956. "Thomas Aquinus,"he continued, "said
out reasonis the first principle of all human work. Now,when you in the current revivalof tubular steel furniture—Mies's designs
ie seat havegraspedthat once,then you act accordingly.So,I would seemed less than ever confined to the period of their origin. To
rmrests throweverythingout that is not reasonable.I don't want to be the degree in which they havebecome timeless,they now
iwn interesting,I want to be good." stand out as the work of an individual whose achievementsin
odeled this area confirm his pre-eminence among the designers of our
) oneof Forlack of moreexplicit statements,we will neverknow the century.
, arm, extentto which Mies had adopted the Aquinian reinterpretation
and of Aristotelianreason.His interest in Catholic writers and
ut curve, thinkersis well known,but they were neverhis only source of
s,or they stimulation.One can make as plausible a case for Immanuel
fused Kant'sphilosophy,which had neverreally gone out of fashion in
; Eames Berlin,and it was this city's intellectual climate that had formed
tition. Mies'smind after he had settled there at the age of twenty-two.
;e TheDutcharchitect Hendrikus PetrusBerlage is said to have
rs, introducedhim to the "truth of materials" doctrine, but Mies,
t of the unlikemost modernists, did not satisfy his reductionist
anic, impulsesby merely leaving materials exposed.It was for him
venwith morea matter of their inherentqualities, the discoveryof laws
thatwould give the resulting form the sanction of being
preordained.Thus,if one reads"material" for Kant's "nature" in
strictly certainpassagesof,for instance,the Critique of Pure Reason,
-ter ^ey readlike guidelines that Mies may haveset for himself.
5owed Kantwrites that reasonoffers not only sets of principles but
ureSi alsoan invitationto experiment. However,its approach to nature
ejectsof is not passivebut, rather,like that of a judge who extracts
m answersto questions he himself has formulated. Mies's
>othhis indebtednessto Kant is even more obvious in his striving for
n universality,which, particularly in his late work,gained such
ibuted importancethat one is tempted to paraphraseKant's
ai categoricalimperative,"Createonly those forms through which
youcan at the same time will that they should become a
I artist in universallaw."It was this attitude of developing forms out of a
r, material'snatureand of purifying them to a point where they
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20 Materials
Steel tubes,chrome plated (current model, U.S.:stainless
steel) in three sections connected by dowels and screws or
welded, one stiffening rod; belting leatherslings for seat,laced
at underside and screwed to rearof frame at back (originally
available with lacqueredor nickel-plated frame and with plain
two-cord yarn fabric slings or continuous lacquered caning).
Dimensions
/ie Height790mm (31 in.),seat height 440 mm (17 5 in.),width
470 mm (18V2in.) [current model: 495 mm —19V2in.],depth
/ie 720 mm (28 5 in.) [current model: 699 mm —27V2in.]; tube
/ie
15 diameter 24 mm ( in.), wall thickness 2 mm (Vie in.).
Manufacturers
(1927-30) Berliner MetallgewerbeJoseph Muller,Berlin;
(1931) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten,Berlin (MR 10); (1932-
present) Thonet (MR 533), (1964-present) Knoll International
2
(256).
3
Side Chair with Arms 1927
22 Materials
Steeltubes, chrome plated in five sections connected by
dowels and screwsor welded, arm tubes screwed to frame at
back and fastened with brackets at bottom,one stiffening rod;
belting leatherslings forseat and back, laced at rearand
underside (originally available with lacqueredor nickel-plated
frame and with plain two-cord yarn fabric slings orcontinuous
lacquered caning, also around armrests).
Dimensions
/5ie Height 790 mm (31 in.),seat height 440 mm (17 in.),width
/ie 520 mm (20 7 in.),depth 820 mm (32% in.); tube diameter 24
/,5
1
/i6
i6 mm ( in.),wall thickness 2 mm ( in.); in one variation,
/i6
3 frame is 5 mm ( in.) narrowerat rearthan in front to allow
parallel alignment of arms with cantilever curve beforepassing
around back.
Manufacturers
(1927-30) Berliner MetallgewerbeJoseph Muller,Berlin;
(1931) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten,Berlin (MR 20); (1932-
present) Thonet (MR 534); (1977) Knoll International (256 A).
24 Materials
Steel tubes, chrome plated in two sections connected by
dowels and screwsor welded, one stiffening rod; belting
leathersling, laced at underside (originally available with
lacqueredor nickel-plated frame and with plain two-cord yarn
fabric or lacquered caning).
Dimensions
//ie
5ie Height 440mm (17 in.),width 450 mm (1711 in.),depth
/ie
15 500 mm (19% in.); tube diameter 24 mm ( in.),wall
thickness 2 mm (Vie in.).
Manufacturers
(1927-30) Berliner Metallgewerbe Joseph Muller,Berlin;
(1931) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten, Berlin (MR 1).
26 Materials
Steel tubes, chrome plated in five sections connected by,
dowels and screws,one stiffening rod; nine rubberor leather
straps; continuous roll and pleat cushion with plain or
checkered linen cover (originally available with lacqueredor
nickel-plated frame and with continuous lacquered caning).
Dimensions
Height 840 mm (33 in.),seat height 400 mm (15% in.),width
550 mm (21% in.),depth 900 mm (35% in.),seat inclination50
,5
/i6in.);tubediameter24mm
/ie mm (115 ( in.),wall thickness2
/s
1 mm (V16in.) and 3 mm ( in.) for the two cantilever/seat
sections of frame.
Manufacturers
(1931) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten,Berlin (MR 30); (1977)
Knoll International (247).
12
1
width
lation50
:kness2
it
13
Lounge Chair with Arms 1931
28 Materials
Steel tubes, chrome plated in seven sections connected by
dowels and screws, arm tubes screwed to frame at back and
fastened with brackets at bottom, two stiffening rods; nine
rubber or leather straps; continuous roll and pleat cushion with
plain orcheckered linen cover (originally available with
lacquered or nickel-plated frame and with continuous
lacquered caning, also around armrests).
Dimensions
Height 840mm (33 in.), seat height 400 mm (15% in.), width
5ie
/9 600 mm (23 in.); depth 950 mm (37 in.); tube diameter
,5
/ie 24 mm ( in.), wall thickness 2 mm (He in.) and 3 mm (Vein.)
for the two cantilever/seat sections of frame.
Manufacturers
(1931) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten, Berlin (MR 40);
(1977) Knoll International (248).
16
29
'
/!
15
16
Coffee Table 1 927
30 Materials
Steel tubes and bars, chrome plated in five sections connected
by dowels and screws; black glass top (originally available with
lacquered or nickel-plated frame and with clear glass or
lacquered plywood top).
Dimensions
(MR 130) height 500 mm (19% in.), diameter 600 mm
/9i6 (23 in.); (MR 140) height 500 mm (19% in.), diameter
6 700mm (27% in.); tube diameter 24 mm ( 1Vi in.), wall
/i6
1 thickness 2 mm ( in.).
Manufacturers
(1927-30 Berliner Metallgewerbe Joseph Muller, Berlin;
(1 931 ) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten, Berlin (MR 130,1 40);
(1977) Knoll International (259).
17. Side chair and coffee table in entrance hall on upper level
of Tugendhat House, Brno, Czechoslovakia. 1930
/ie
9 20. Original coffee table measuring 600 mm (23 in.) in
height and diameter. The Museum of Modern Art, gift of Alfred
H. Barr, Jr. (474.70)
19
Chaise Longue 1 931
Materials
Steel tubes, chrome plated in six sections connected bydower
and screws,three stiffening rods; thirteen rubberstraps;
continuous roll and pleat cushion with plain or checkeredliner
cover (originally available with lacqueredor nickel-plated
frame).
Dimensions
Height 955 mm (371/2in.), seat height at knees 490 mm
/9ie (19% in.), width 600 mm (23 in.), depth 1,200 mm
/i6
3 47 in.); tube diameter 25 mm (1 in.), wall thickness 2 mm
/i6
3 (%6in.) and 5 mm ( in.) for the two cantilever/seatsections;
originally available as small model with higher overallandseat
heights and a shorter depth, produced by Thonet.
Manufacturers
(1931) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten,Berlin (MR 100); (from
1932 on) Thonet (MR 535); (1977) Knoll International(241)
Materials
Steel tubes, lacquered, nickel orchrome plated, reclining frame
in four sections, support frame in two sections, connected by
dowels and screws, both frames clamped together by brackets
two stiffening rods; rubber straps; continuous roll and pleat
cushion with plain or checkered linen cover.
Dimensions
/5ie Height 950 mm (37 in.), seat height at knees 500 mm
/5ie
9 s (19 in.), width 600 mm (23 in.), depth 1,200 mm
/i (4 73 6 in.); tube diameter 25 mm (1 in.), wall thickness
3 mm (Ve in.).
Manufacturer
(1 931 ) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten, Berlin (MR 110).
25. Sketch for chaise longue with spring frame. 1931 . Pencilon
/i6
3 paper, 330 x 208 mm (13 x 8 in.). Mies van der Rohe Archive
The Museum of Modern Art (552.74)
27. Elevation and plan drawing for chaise longue with spring
frame. Scale 1:1. Dated 19 August 1931 . Pen and ink on vellum
/i
]A 1,556 x 996 mm (61 5 6 x 39 in.). Mies van der Rohe Archive,
The Museum of Modern Art (962.74)
MR-ELDER-
LIEGE
STUHL
M 1:1
Reclining
Frame 1 932
Materials
Steel
tubes,chrome-plated reclining and support frames in
sectionsconnectedby dowels and screws,three stiffening
rods,
recliningframe adjustable to two positions by means of
hooksrestingon pegs attached to the support frame; rubber
straps;continuousroll and pleat cushion.
Dimensions
Heightat high position 925 mm (36% in.),seat height at knees
/i6
5
/i6 440mm(17 in.),width 660 mm (2515 in.),depth at high
position1,720 mm (67% in.); tube diameter 25 mm (1 in.).
Manufacturer
Neverin production.(Cradle-supportversion—1977) Knoll
International
(242)
36.Re
proje
Bauh
36
34.Sketchof recliningframe with different support 35. Sketchof reclining frame with different support
configurations.
1931-32. Pencilon paper,296 x 209 mm configurations. 1931-32. Pencilon paper,296 x 209 mm
1
/4
//ie
14 (11,1 x 8 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museumof (111V16x 8 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museumof
ModernArt (927.74) Modern Art (926.74)
34 35
36
40 37. Sketches for reclining frame with different support
/7s elements. 1931-32. Pencil on paper, 200 x 170 mm (7 x
A 6 3 in.). Mies van der Rohe Archive, The Museum of Modern Art
(488.74)
XIX.
37 38
39
41
Tubular Support Elements 1 930-34
42 40. Desk with leather-covered top and tubular steel legs, book
shelves with rosewood veneered planks and tubular steel
supports, as installed in the apartment of Philip Johnson, New
York. 1930
42
43
r?yi its.
3 w K'$' *&'
'A
/•afe
MR 1002
B LUMENSTANDER. D.R.G.M,
3 m HOME ZWISCHEWBOOBSJ. DB(Kl SE5PAHNT
43
Couch 1930
44
if
~a
nr
44
45 46
Materials 44.Ske
Wood frame with lap joints and attached half-roundedge, onpap
tubular steel legs set into frame with slotted metal sleeveto Archiv
tighten leg by screwing flange; eleven rubber straps; mattress
and bolster in fabric or leather. 45.Ske
paper,
2
Dimensions Archiv
/4 Height (top of frame) 285 mm (111 in.),length 2,000 mm
/i6
5s (78 in.), width 1,000 mm (39 in.), thickness of frame 46.Cum
9s,
/ie
/i6
15 50 mm (115 in.),width of frame 100 mm (3 in.);diameter le an
of foot tube 26 mm (1 Vwin.),distance of feet from endsof Modem
frame 257.5 mm GOVsin.).
Manufacturers
(From 1930 on) Richard Fahnkow/GuntherandCo.,Berlin;
(1964-present) Knoll International (258).
45
44.Sketches
for tubular steel bed frames. Early 1930s. Pencil
/iex °npaper,
5 211 x 296 mm (8 11 1Viein.).MiesvanderRohe
Archive,
The Museum of Modern Art (799.74)
Materials
Flatsteel bars,chrome plated (currentmodel, U.S.:stainless
steel) in nine sections welded together; nine seat and eight
back leatherstraps screwed into edges of transversebars;
solid horsehaircushions with plain fabric or pigskin cover,top
of cushions divided by welts into twenty equal parts with
buttons at the intersections.
Dimensions
9ie
//a F!eight760mm (29 7 in.),seat height 345 mm (13 in.),
/2
1 width 750 mm (29 in.),length 754 mm (29 % in.); steel bar
/ie
7 width 35 mm (1 %), steel bar thickness 11 mm ( in.); strap
/2
1 width 38 mm (1 in.).
Manufacturers
(1929-30) BerlinerMetallgewerbe Joseph Muller,Berlin;
(1931) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten,Berlin (MR 90); (1948-
present) Knoll International (250).
Materials
Flat steel bars,chrome plated (current model, U.S.:stainless
steel) in eightsections welded together; seven leatherstraps
screwed into edges of transversebars; solid horsehaircushion
with plain fabric or pigskin cover,top of cushion divided by
welts into sixteen equal parts with buttons at the intersections
(currentmodel available with belting leathersling, laced at
underside).
Dimensions
Height (top of frame) 290 mm (11% in.), width 580 mm
/ie (22 ,3 in.), depth 600 mm (23 9 in.), seat depth 540 mm
(21% in.); steel bar width 35 mm (1 % in.), steel bar thickness
/i6
7 11 mm ( in.).
Manufacturers
(1929-30) Berliner Metallgewerbe Joseph Muller,Berlin;
(1931) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten,Berlin (MR 80); (1948-
present) Knoll International (251, 253)
53
Chaise Longue Studies 1934
56
Tugendhat Chair 1929-30
Materials
Flatsteel bars,chrome plated (currentmodel, U.S.:stainless
steel) in six sections and two arm pieces (current model
without armrests),joints connected by screwsor welded, two
stiffening rods; eight horizontalleatherstraps with belt
buckles; solid horsehaircushions with plain fabric or pigskin
cover.
Dimensions
Height 875 mm (34% in.) [height of current model reduced by
60 mm —2 % in.], seat height 320 mm (12 % in.), width
770 mm (30% in.),depth 700 mm (27 % in.), steel bar width
7e
A 35 mm (1 % in.), steel bar thickness 11 mm ( in.), cushion
/ie thickness 65 mm (2 9 in.).
Manufacturers
(1929-30) Berliner Metallgewerbe Joseph Muller,Berlin;
(1931) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten,Berlin (MR 70); (1964-
present) Knoll International(254); (versionwith arms—1977)
Knoll International (254 A)
Dimensions
/ie Height 880 mm (34 9 in.),seat height 340 mm (13% in.),
/ie
15 width 700 mm (27 % in.); tube diameter 24 mm ( in.),wall
/ie thickness 2 mm (Vie in.); cushion thickness 65 mm (2 9 in.).
MR FEDER-SESSEL
iTAMUROHR f\/1 4:>f
65
Manufacturers 65. Elevationand plan drawing of tubular steel Tugendhatchair.
(1930) Berliner MetalIgewerbeJoseph Muller,Berlin; (1931) Scale 1:1. 1931. Pen and ink on paper, 1,045 x 1,010 mm
/i6
/ie Bamberg Metallwerkstatten, Berlin (MR 60). (41 3 x 39 13 in.).Mies van derRohe Archive,The Museumof
Modern Art (948.74)
I
3l
367-W
69
70 71
Tugendhat Coffee Table 1930
60 Materials
Flatsteel bars,chrome plated (currentmodel, U.S.:stainless
steel) in sections welded together; clear plate glass (originally
available with lacqueredor nickel-plated frame and black
glass or rosewood top).
Dimensions
/ie Height of frame 530 mm (20 13 in.),length of frame at side
900 mm (35% in.); steel bar width 35 mm (1 % in.),steel bar
/7ie thickness 11 mm ( in.); length of glass at side 1,000 mm
/i6
/ie
13 (39 5 in.), thickness of glass top 20 mm ( in.).
Manufacturers
(1930) BerlinerMetallgewerbe Joseph Muller,Berlin; (1931)
Bamberg Metallwerkstatten,Berlin (MR 150); (1948-present)
Knoll International(252). Originally labeled Dessautable, it is
now listed in the Knoll Internationalcatalogue as Barcelona
table.
74. Sketchesof tables with different flat bar and tubular steel
leg configurations. Early 1930s. Pencilon paper,209 x 296 mm
(8Vax 11 1Viein.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museumof
Modern Art (894.74)
73
Brno Chair 1929-30
Materials
Steel tubes, chrome plated in two sections connected by
dowels and screws or welded; wooden seat and back frames
connected by iron angles and supported by metal studs
projecting from frame; upholstered and coveredwith white calf
parchment (originally available with lacqueredor nickel-plated
frame and fabric and leather cover).
Dimensions
Height 786 mm (30 % in.),height of frame 695 mm (27 % in.),
/ie height of seat 437.5 mm (17 3 in.),width of frame 550 mm
(21 % in.),depth 595 mm (28% in.),depth of frame 565 mm
/i6
/ie
15 (22 3 in.); tube diameter 24 mm ( in.),tube wall thickness
/ie 2 mm (Vi6 in.), seat and back thickness 30 mm (1 3 in.).
Manufacturers
(1929-30) BerlinerMetallgewerbe Joseph Muller,Berlin;
(1931) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten,Berlin (MR 50); (1977)
Knoll International (245).
alf
ed
Brno Chair 1929-30 and Variations 1931 -35
64 Materials
Flat steel bars,chrome plated in three sections welded
together,attached angles screwed to seat and back; wood
frame upholstered and covered with leather.
Dimensions
1s
//ie Height 810 mm (3113 in.),height of frame 690 mm (27 in.),
/ie
5 height of seat 440 mm (17 in.), width of feet 410 mm
/8
1 (16 in.),depth 570 mm (22% in.); steel bar width 35 mm
/ie
7 (1% in.),steel bar thickness 11 mm ( in.),setback of bottom
/ie
15 cross bar 100 mm (3 in.).
Manufacturers
(1929-30) Berliner Metallgewerbe Joseph Muller,Berlin;
(1931) Bamberg Metallwerkstatten,Berlin (special orderonly);
(1960-present) Knoll International (255).
— ______
IES
4 »* I Herrn Prof
LULWIj M
;c
VAN PER ROHS
Am Karlabed 24
BERLIN
TTutsonland
80. Sketchesof Brnochair variationsor other frame supported 67
seat and back units. 1934. Pencil on paper,296 x 21 1 mm
/i6
/ie (11 11 x 8 5 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museumof
Modern Art (656.74)
89
87. Sketchesof chairs with bentwood seat surfacesand spring 88. Sketchesof chairs with bentwood seatsurfacesand spring
connected supports. 1933-34. Pencil on paper,285 x 223 mm connected supports. 1933-34. Pencil on paper,285 x 224 mm
/s
/ie (11% x 8 13 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museumof (11% x 8 7 in.). Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museumof
Modern Art (709.74) Modern Art (689.74)
69
/
I
90
91. Drawing for chair with high back, Barcelona-typeframe,
and slatted seat surface. 1934. Pencilon paper,278 x 291 mm
/i6
/2 (10 15 x 111 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museumof
Modern Art (767.74)
92. Sketch of chair with high back and upholstered seat surface 94. Drawing for chair with bentwood seat surfaceand trestle-
on reversed-Z-shapedsupport. 1934. Pencilon paper,229 x type support frame. 1934. Colored pencil on paper,210 x
/iex
5
/s 298 mm (9 Viex 11 % in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The 295 mm (8 11 5 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The
Museum of Modern Art (671.74) Museum of Modern Art (606.74)
93. Sketch of the reversed-Z-typechair with Kangaroofeet and 95. Drawingfor chair with bentwood seat surfaceand coat-
/ie arms. Detail. 1934. Pencilon paper,328 x 209 mm (12 15 x rack-type support frame. 1934. Colored pencil on paper,21 I x
/iex
5 QVain.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museumof Modern Art 295 mm (8 11 % in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,Museum
(662.74) of Modern Art (608.74)
71
94
-repass*.
jfji c)
p
"4=
f 4
95
93
96. Drawing of bench with bentwood seat surfaceand angular
flat bar supportf rame. 1934. Pencilon paper,277 x 292 mm
/ie
/2 (10 15 x 111 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museumof
Modern Art (923.74)
97. Drawing of deck chair or day bed with slatted laterally bent
seatsurface and angularflatbarsupportframe. 1934. Pencilon
paper,323 x 400 mm (12 % x 15 % in.).Mies van der Rohe
Archive,The Museum of Modern Art (924.74)
99. Drawing of rocking chair with bentwood seat surfaceand 98. Drawing of rocking chair with continuous seat surfaceand
flat bar support frame. 1934. Pen and ink on paper,275 x tubular frame. 1934. Pencil,colored pencil on paper,21 1 x
/ie 312 mm (10 13 x 12 5 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The 295 mm (8 5 x 11 % in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The
Museum of Modern Art (770.74) Museum of Modern Art (603.74)
V! "HI 1 i>
Bentwood Frame Studies 1934-35
100. Sketchof chairs with split bentwood frames and steel rod 75
Bild 7. Bild 2. Bild 3. reinforcement.1934-35. Penand ink,colored pencil on paper,
209 x 297 mm (8% x 11% in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The
o fl Museum of Modern Art (1 173.74)
103
Conchoidal Chair Studies Early 1 940s
109. Sketchof conchoidal chairwithoutarms. Early 1940s. 110. Sketchesof conchoidal chair without arms,from the rear.
Pencilon paper,152 x 215 mm (6 x 8% in.).Mies van der Rohe Early 1940s. Pencilon paper,152x212mm (6x8% in.).Mies
Archive,The Museum of Modern Art (1053.74) van der Rohe Archive,The Museum of Modern Art (1018.74)
111. Sketchof conchoidal seatshell. Early 1940s. Pencil on 112. Sketchof conchoidal seat shell. Early 1940s. Pencilon
/i6
3ie paper,152 x208 mm (6x8 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive, paper,152 x 208 mm (6 x 8 in.)Mies van der RoheArchive,
The Museum of Modern Art (1022.74) The Museum of Modern Art (1 109.74)
113. Sketchof conchoidal seatshell. Early 1940s. Pencil on 114. Sketchof conchoidal seat shell. Early 1940s. Pencilon
/3
5i6 paper,152 x 208 mm (6 x 8 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive, paper,152x210mm (6x8 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,
The Museum of Modern Art (1028.74) The Museum of Modern Art (1033.74)
118. Sketchof conchoidal seatshell with arms. Early 1940s. 119. Sketchof conchoidal seat shell with arms. Early 1940s.
Ae
/3
ie Pencil on paper,152 x 207 mm (6x8 3 in.).Mies van der Rohe Pencilon paper,152x207 mm (6x8 in.).Mies van der Rohe
Archive,The Museum of Modern Art (1061.74) Archive,The Museum of Modern Art (1059.74)
118 119
120. Sketchesof conchoidal seat shell with arms in different
bases. Early 1940s. Pen and ink on paper, 152 x 206 mm (6 x
8 Vsin.). Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museumof ModernArt
(1094.74)
121. Sketchof conchoidal chair with separate seat shell with
rearsupport and front base with arms. Early 1940s. Pencilon
Ae paper,152 x 21 1 mm (6x8 5 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,
The Museum of Modern Art (1 105.74)
122. Sketchof conchoidal chairwith separateseatand base 124. Sketchesof conchoidal chair base with separate arm and
with overlapping open armrestsattached to the seat.Early back unit. Early 1940s. Pencil on paper, 152 x 207 mm (6 x
/i6
/a 1940s. Pencilon paper,152 x 206 mm (6 x 8 1 in.).Mies van 8 3 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museumof Modern
der Rohe Archive,The Museum of Modern Art (1019.74) Art (1119.74)
123. Sketchesof conchoidal chair bases with arms and of 125. Sketchesof conchoidal chairs with armless seat base and
separateseat shell with its own rearsupport.Early 1940s. Pen rear support back unit. Early 1940s. Pencil on paper, 152 x
/ie
3
Ae and ink on paper,207 x 152 mm (8 3 x 6 in.).Mies van der 208 mm (6 x 8 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museum
Rohe Archive,The Museum of Modern Art (1093.74) of Modern Art (1099.74)
126. Sketchesof conchoidal seat shells with arms and
separate bases. Early 1940s. Pen and ink on paper, 152 x
/ie 210 mm (6x8 5 in.).Mies van der RoheArchive,The Museum
of Modern Art (1 103.74)
86 Books Articles:
Giedion, Siegfried. Mechanization TakesCommand. New "Achtung: Stahl,"Der Deutsche Tischlerme/ster,vol. 37, 1931.
York, 1948.
Breuer,Marcel."Metal Mobel und moderne Raumlichkeit,"Das
Glaeser,Ludwig. Mies van der Rohe: Drawings in the Neue Frankfurt, vol. 2, 1928.
Collection of The Museum of Modern Art. New York, 1969.
Buddemann. "Ausstellung 'Der Stuhl'/Stuttgart 1928,"
Graff, Werner,ed. Innenraume. Stuttgart, 1928 Die Form,vol. 3,1928.
Hassenpflug,Gustav.Mobel aus Stahlrohr und Stahlblech. "Deutsche BauausstellungBerlin 1931,"Stein HolzEisen, vol.
Dusseldorf, 1936. 45, 1931.
Hassenpflug, Gustav.Stahlmbbel. Dusseldorf,1960. " 'Die Wohnung unsererZeit'auf der Deutschen Bauaustellung
Berlin 1931," Moderne Bauformen, vol. 30, 1931.
Hoeber,F Peter Behrens. Munich, 1913.
"Die Wohnung unsererZeit," Innen-Dekoration, vol.42, July
Jahrbuch des Deutschen Werkbundes, 1912 and 1913. 1931.
Jena, 1913.
"Gerry Griffith, Master Craftsman in Stainless Steel,"
Johnson, Philip. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. New York, 1947. Interiors, Nov. 1964.
Le Corbusier. Vers une architecture. Paris, 1923. Glaser,Curt. "Berliner Ausstellungen,"Kunst und Kunstler, vol.
29, 1930.
Mang, Karl, ed. Das Haus Thonet. Vienna, 1969.
Hilberseimer,Ludwig. "UberStahlmobel," DieBauwelt, no.34
Pevsner,Nikolaus.An Enguiryinto Industrial Art in England. 1929.
Cambridge, 1937.
Hilberseimer,Ludwig. "Die Wohnung unserer Zeit,"
Rasch,Heinz and Bodo. W/e Bauen? Stuttgart, 1927. Die Form,vol. 6, 1931.
Rasch, Heinz and Bodo. Der Stuhl. Stuttgart, 1929. Kramer,Ferdinand."Individuelle oder Typisierte Mobel?"
Das Neue Frankfurt, vol. 2, 1928.
Read,Herbert. Art and Industry. London, 1934.
Lotz, Wilhelm. "Mobeleinrichtung und Typenmobel,"
Schneck, Adolf. Der Stuhl. Stuttgart, 1937. Die Form,vol. 3, 1928.
Seeger,Mia, ed. Der neue Wohnbedarf.Stuttgart, 1935. Lotz, Wilhelm, "Ausstellung des Deutschen Werkbundes in
Paris,"Die Form, vol. 5, June 7, 1930.
Exhibition Catalogues Mies van der Rohe, Ludwig. "Burohaus,"G, no. 1, 1923.
Das neue Holzmobel Aalto. Zurich: Wohnbedarf store, 1933. Perriand,Charlotte."Wood or Metal,"CreativeArt, vol.4, Apr.
1929.
MetalenBuisstoelen1925-1940.Delft:Stedelijk
Museum, Feb./Mar.1975. "Stahl als Werkstoff," Die Form,vol. 7, 1932.