60s Kristian Vedel ‘modus’ side table for Søren Willadsen

Designer
Kristian Solmer Vedel
Manufacturer
Søren Willadsen
Period
1960s
Origin
Denmark
Material
Rosewood
Color
Rosewood
Code
10080420TB
Dimensions
55cm (w) x 55cm (d) x 32cm (h)
WS
A - B
Price
Sold, located Paris
Provenance
See writing below.

Kristian Solmer Vedel (March 2, 1923 – March 5, 2003)

was a Danish industrial designer and part of the Scandinavian Design movement.
He completed his apprenticeship as cabinetmaker in 1942. From 1944-45 he was visiting student under professor Kaare Klint at the Department of Furniture at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen. In 1946, he graduated from the Furniture Design Department of the School of Arts, Crafts and Design in Copenhagen, where he also lectured 1953-56. He served as chairman of Danish Furniture Designers 1947-49. He was instrumental in establishing the Industrial Designers of Denmark and served as the society’s first chairman, from 1966 to 1968.

In 1950, he married Birgit (born Arnfred), and in 1954, they set up a design studio in Humlebæk, outside Copenhagen. The couple had four children, but were divorced in 1961. Vedel married his second wife, Ane Pedersen in 1961.

Between 1968 and 1971, Kristian Vedel organised and led the Department of Industrial Design at the University of Nairobi, Kenya. He and his wife, Ane, returned to Denmark in 1972 to establish a design studio on Thyholm, in North-Western Jutland. At Thyholm Kristian Vedel devoted most of his time to cultivating the surrounding landscape, breeding Shropshire sheep, and researching utilization of their wool, hides and meat.

Influenced by Kaare Klint and the German Bauhaus school, his “classic modern” designs are characterized by creative use of materials, especially plastics and wood, and with a strong sense for ergonomic and functional requirements.

This side table belongs to the Modus series and has a rare metal laminated turnable table top in the middle. As rare as beautiful.

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