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Architonic ID: 1547193
SKU: 7-050 HG 100
Year of Launch: 1951
Moulded plywood seat shell, black matte or chrome-plated metal frame and central attachment point
W43, D53, H83, SH46
Concept
Hans Bellmann's Einpunkt chair feels very familiar today although it was a bold opposite to the prevalent Carpenter style of the 1950s. The bellmann einpunkt chair is a milestone in Swiss design history and Bellmann's greatest work. Its importance is based on a single screw—one point, hence the name—holding the construction in place, and on a flexible plywood back with a centre opening lending it a pleasant springiness. This centre opening doubles up as a handle, similar to the traditional Swiss Stabellen chair. The cut-out also communicates the lightweight ergonomics of the chair. The bellmann chair only consists of a few components, is economic to produce and weighs in at just 3.8kg. Hans Bellmann's (1911–1990) designs, which bear the stamp of his studies at Bauhaus in Dessau and Berlin as well as of his job at Mies van der Rohe's architectural firm, excel in the most sparing use of resources. This visionary is amongst the most distinguished of pioneers in Switzerland's classical modernity. As "4015 ST," his Einpunkt chair received several awards for its good shape ("Die gute Form").
This product belongs to collection:
Base metal, Metal, Seat engineered wood, Wood
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Switzerland
Hans Georg Bellmann was born in Turgi in Switzerland in 1911. He completed a three-year apprenticeship as a draughtsman in Baden and in 1931 he started to study at the Bauhaus in Dessau/Berlin. Until 1933 Bellmann attended courses held by Kandinsky, Arndt, Albers and Mies van der Rohe amongst others, following the latter to Berlin after obtaining his Bauhaus Diploma. He returned to Switzerland and until 1938 he collaborated with Wohnbedarf AG in Zurich where he focused on housing and furnishing issues. In 1948 Bellmann set up his own business in Zurich. In 1952 he designed the controversial “Einpunkt-Stuhl” (lit. “one-point chair”) together with Max Bill. The issue was the usage of a wooden seat shell. In 1953/54 Max Bill arranged a lectureship for him in Ulm at the Hochschule für Gestaltung (Academy of Design) on interior design. Bellmann die in Muri, Switzerland in 1990.