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Pelican Table
Architonic ID: 1393404
Year of Launch: 2014
Size: Ø 63cm x H 45cm
Concept
CONCEPT
The only known version of this table was displayed with two Pelican Chairs at the Copenhagen Cabinetmakers’ Guild Exhibition in 1940. As far as we know, it was never produced again. Both the Pelican Chair and the Pelican Table are exceptional examples of Finn Juhl’s spiritual kinship with modern art. He handpicked particular artifacts, which were exhibited together with his furniture at the exhibition.
No drawings of the table exist- only a photograph of the table from the exhibition together with two Pelican Chairs. When the original table suddenly reappeared at an auction in Paris almost 75 years later, the accurate dimensions and measurements of the table could finally be determined.
Today, the Pelican Table is manufactured in oak, walnut, Oregon pine or black painted.
This product belongs to collection:
Base solid wood, Tabletop solid wood, Wood

Denmark
The Danish designer, architect, and interior architect Finn Juhl is today primarily known for his furniture designs, despite his contributions to all three fields. He is one of the most prominent Scandinavian furniture designers, and, along with Arne Jacobsen, one of the most important representatives of Danish design. Finn Juhl: a biography Finn Juhl was born 30 January 1912 in Frederiksberg. Under pressure from his father, he went to study architecture at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen from 1930 to 1934. Subsequently, he worked with the renowned architect Vilhelm Lauritzen, who himself contributed significantly to Danish architectural modernism. Juhl then began to teach interior design at his alma mater in Copenhagen, and soon after that founded his first design studio. In the 1940s, he also taught at the Frederiksberg Technical School and so began to influence the next generation of designers through his tutelage. In 1942, Juhl designed a house for himself, which is still known simply as Finn Juhl's House. In 1951, Juhl made his debut in the United States at the Good Design Show in Chicago and also at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In both 1954 and 1957, he received significant recognition for work he exhibted at the Milan Triennale. He was then given the task of designing several pieces of furniture for the Danish Embassy in Washington, D.C. and for the offices and aircraft interiors of Scandinavian Airlines. During the 1950s, Juhl was appointed the interior architect of the Trusteeship Council Chamber inside the New York headquarters of the United Nations, where he designed the chairs for the organisation's deputies. Other well-known designs by Juhl include a porcelain dinner set for Denmark's Bing & Grondahl, refrigerators for General Electric, and glassware for Georg Jensen. Finn Juhl: Poet Sofa The Poet Sofa was designed by Finn Juhl for his own house in 1941; Juhl designed the sofa along curving organic lines, with armrests which seem to softly embrace the sitter. The hand-stitched sofa became a design classic in the 1950s, when it was discovered in America during the Scandinavian design craze. Finn Juhl: 45 Chair Designed in 1945, the 45 Chair by Finn Juhl signified a break with existing traditions in chair design. The main feature of the design is the freeing of the seat and the backrest from the frame of the chair itself. The result is a simple, elegant and remarkable chair which brought Juhl enormous recognition, making him world-renowned and helping to popularise Danish design the world over. © by Architonic