:

Study Collection Seating Furniture

Curator: Sebastian Hackenschmidt
This display draws on the MAK’s extensive Furniture Collection to present a diverse typology of seating furniture. As a both visually appealing and didactic compilation covering numerous eras and styles, it also serves to shed light on the constantly changing, socially coded ways in which human beings deal with objects.
Part of our material memory is located in this room. Is it only a collection of arbitrarily selected household items or is it indeed history manifesting itself here as the totality of our awareness? To what extent do we still relate to these objects in a direct way? Or has an archive accumulated here of has-beens, whose lowest common denominator comprises the classifications “museum quality” or “second-hand”? We have the choice between these two associations: between the character of an artefact either as an object or as a function. The latter allows the museum piece to reinstate itself once again as a component of our day-to-day consumer society context. Instead of a one-dimensional history of style we experience a three-dimensional pedigree of our own cultural history. In the process, the self-evident receives the chance of becoming evident again.

 This is brought about by means of visually sensuous and non-didactic communication. The visible contrast of different or similar types, functions, stages of development, and materials succeeds in evoking an awareness of the multilayered experience involved in “seating” and, by addressing the viewer directly, elicits an evaluative reaction that may well lead to a reappraisal of our attitude to seating and how it is so often taken for granted. This stimulation may well contribute to transforming an undiscriminating consumer into a mature and responsible one by arousing in him considerations that have been obliterated by the avalanche of everyday products.

The chair is the piece of furniture closest to the human being. Its proportions are most intimately related to the human body. From the changing aesthetics and functionality of the seat the social morphology of body language can be interpreted. This seems to find expression between the two opposite poles of prestige and comfort, which emerge according to the respective defined values and set priorities. A high, straight backed armchair demands different clothing and posture from the sitter than one with a low, backward-sloping, rounded backrest.

The question of principle arises as to whether furniture should conform to the human body in the sitting position, or vice versa. An extreme example of the latter is the “Sacco” or “Bean Bag,” on show here, a typical model of seating furniture for the '68 generation. The concept of the suite of seat furniture, which did not arise until the 18th century, entails a number of matching seating furniture types combined to form a decorative whole. It expresses the fact that there is no longer any need to differentiate between the status of the individual users. This development could only assert itself at a time when courtly precedent stipulated a less strict hierarchy between the individual types of seating. In our subconscious, however, this historical development lives on today. As late as 1922, the “Handbook of Good Breeding and Fine Manners” ordained: “As a lady your proper place is on the sofa, to the right of the lady of the house. As a young girl you should make use of a chair.” Seating furniture unifies the language of forms and of the body into a legible, cultural-historical whole ... / Christian Witt-Dörring, curator of the Furniture and Woodwork Collection at the time when the MAK Study Collection’s seating furniture presentation was reconceived.

Related

Permanent Collection

:

Permanent Collection Historicism Art Nouveau

Artistic intervention: Barbara Bloom
The Historicism and Art Nouveau Collection on permanent display includes an overview of a hundred years of Thonet furniture production. These and other timeless items of bent wood furniture manifest a creative approach that ingeniously exploits the properties of the material and points to new ways ahead for seating furniture.
more »

Freier Artikel

:

MAK Collection Online

The MAK¹s comprehensive holdings of applied and contemporary art
more »

Permanent Collection

:

Permanent Collection Empire Style Biedermeier

Artistic intervention: Jenny Holzer
Besides brilliant achievements in the arts and crafts production in Austria in the nineteenth century, the Empire and Biedermeier Collection on permanent display shows the creative and material versatility of an epoch marked by cultural, social and economic upheavals in the wake of the industrial revolution.
more »

MAK-Collection

:

Furniture and Woodwork Collection

Curator: Sebastian Hackenschmidt
The MAK is home to an extensive collection of furniture and woodwork, in light of which the artistic and stylistic tendencies of furniture history—with a focus on Austria and Vienna—can be understood along with the cultural-historical and political developments of the past nearly 150 years. The collection encompasses over 4,600 objects ranging from small carvings and ornamental boxes to massive cabinets and whole room interiors.
more »
 

Random

:

Permanent Collection Baroque Rococo Classicism

Artistic intervention: Donald Judd
With a unique artistic intervention Donald Judd managed to blend the different stylistic worlds of the Baroque, Rococo, Classicism and Minimalism. Taking on a central position here is the Porcelain Chamber from the Palais Dubsky in Brno, one of the first rooms ever designed in European porcelain.
more »
:

The Fitzpatrick-Leland House

The Fitzpatrick-Leland House R.M. Schindler, (1936) on the corner of Mulholland Drive in the Hollywood Hills was donated to the MAK Center in 2007. Today the house serves as an active hub for research, contemplation, and conversation about modern architecture, contemporary art, and urban space.
more »
:

DER PREIS DER SCHÖNHEIT

100 Jahre Wiener Werkstätte
Published on the occasion of the exhibition “Yearning for beauty. For the 100th anniversary of the Viennaer Werkstätte” (10.12.2003–7.3.2004)
German
448 pages, b/w and full colored illustrations
32,5 x 24,5 cm, hardbound
MAK, Vienna / Hatje Cantz Verlag Publishers, Ostfildern-Ruit,-Ruit 2003
out of print
:

MAK/ZINE #2/2012

The third edition of the MAK’s magazine is on the reconceptualization of the exhibition spaces Vienna 1900.
VIENNA 1900. Viennese Arts and Crafts 1890-1938.
more »