Fritz Hansen ... an anniversary

This year, the Danish furniture and design company Fritz Hansen mark a major anniversary having been in business now for 150 years ... the cabinet maker Fritz Hansen established the company in October 1872. 

For nearly a century, their workshops were in the city, in a courtyard at 10 Overgaden Oven Vandet, just inside the old embankments of the defences at the south end of Christianshavn.

As the company expanded they opened a saw mill in Allerød in the 1890s and then, in 1914, expanded the workshops in Christianshavn, across the lane to the south, to a group of buildings in the block bounded by Store Søndervoldstræde - the narrow lane - and by Dronningensgade and Lille Søndervoldstræde.

Christian E Hansen, the son of the founder, became a director of the company in 1899 and not only began the first collaborations with leading architects to design major pieces but also won significant and influential contracts for Fritz Hansen including commissions to make chairs for what was then the newly-completed City Hall and chairs for the Danish Parliament building.

By 1965 the sawmill, and the factory and administration there, had expanded and the whole company moved out to Allerød.

From 2000 - the company was known as The Republic of Fritz Hansen but since 2019, under Josef Kaiser - their new CEO - they have returned to the simple and straightforward name of the founder.

Fritz Hansen produces new designs by established designers like Kasper Salto and Cecilie Manz and new young designers - including, for instance, the light by Isabel Ahm and Signe Lund and the Stub Table by Mette Schelde but they are also justifiably proud of an amazing back catalogue.

They made many of the great designs from the classic period of Danish design from the middle decades of the last century including the DAN Chair by Søren Hansen from 1932; the dining chair from the Bellevue restaurant at Klampenborg by Arne Jacobsen from 1934 and, of course, the renowned chairs by Jacobsen from the 1950s including the Ant Chair from 1952; 7'eren or Chair 7 and the chairs for the SAS hotel including The Swan and The Egg.

The Swan Chair and The Egg designed by Arne Jacobsen in 1958 and still in production -
photographed in the Copenhagen store of Fritz Hansen at Valkendorfsgade 4

 

Fritz Hansen himself was a cabinetmaker but from the 1930s Fritz Hansen began to make steel-framed furniture, experimenting with their own versions of Bauhaus cantilevered chairs and then produced the Cantilevered Chair by Mogens Lassen in 1933.

They bought the rights to and they still produce steel-framed chairs designed by Poul Kjærholm including the PK 11, the PK 22, the PK 24 recliner - possibly the most elegant Danish chair ever produced - and the iconic PK 25 and the PK 62.

That's an astounding back catalogue of classic Danish designs.

 

Fritz Hansen
to mark the anniversary, Fritz Hansen
have published their time line

København Stadsarkiv 52050

the first workshops were in the courtyard at Overgaden Oven Vandet in Christianshavn

an amazing photograph from the company archive with men from the workshops in the courtyard in Christianshavn

chairs designed by Poul Kjærholm and still produced by Fritz Hansen include the PK 22, PK 25, PK 62 and PK 11

 

Poul Kjærholm at Fritz Hansen

For 3daysofdesign Fritz Hansen set out displays or organise demonstrations in their Copenhagen store at Valkendorfsgade 4 but, this year, they have tried something that is much more ambitious because the space of the store has been taken over for a major exhibition on the work of the architect and designer Poul Kjærholm.

Fritz Hansen acquired the license to produce the works by Kjærholm after the death of the designer in 1980 and a significant proportion of his works are still in the Fritz Hansen catalogue.

The furniture currently available was shown here together with drawings and photographs from the company archive and with some of the chair frames stripped down to show how they are constructed and, along with these, are some of the bolts and fixings that are such a crucial part of the engineering of these pieces.

The exhibition opened on 24 October 2020 and continues through to the 14 November 2020

Fritz Hansen

 
 

Anders Petersen - Collection and Craft

 

The gallery of Anders Petersen is at the north-east corner of Kløvermarken - the large open green space south of Christianshavn. The building was offices but just over two years ago the space was converted and opened up to form a long and beautifully lit gallery space but there are also workshops here where furniture is made and some pieces restored.

The present display is a collection of classic furniture designed by Poul Kjærholm - many with an amazing provenance - and there is a show of carefully-selected Japanese design and crafts that will continue through the summer and coincides with various events at diferent venues around the city … a festival that marks the diplomatic and trade links between Denmark and Japan.

An exhibition of furniture by Tomoyuki Matsuoka and work by Jan Machenhauer will open at the gallery on the 4th May 2017.

Anders Petersen Kløvermarksvej 70

 

PK 31 designed by Poul Kjærholm from 1958

Chair PK 11 by Poul Kjærholm 1957