60s Sven Ivar Dysthe lounge chair model 1001 for Dokka Mobler set/2

Designer
Sven Ivar Dysthe
Manufacturer
Dokka Mobler
Period
1960s
Origin
Norway
Material
Leather, Mahogany
Color
black
Code
05020621ZF
Condition
Very good condition, fully restored.
Dimensions
75cm (w) x77cm (d) x 78cm (h) | seath 35cm armh 49cm
Price
Sold, XC0722
Provenance
See writing below.

Sven Ivar Dysthe (25 August 1931 – 1 March 2020) was a Norwegian furniture designer born in Oslo.

Rare among Norwegian designers of his era, Dysthe studied outside his homeland at London’s Royal College of Arts. Graduating in 1954 with a degree in industrial design—and the rare distinction of a First Class graduate— Dysthe moved around Scandinavia for his initial employment: first, in Copenhagen, at Peter Hvidt and Orla Mølgaard Nielsen’s design firm; then back in Oslo, where in 1956, on assignment for furniture manufacturer Hiorth & Østlyngen, Dysthe produced his beech, teak, and woven seagrass Model 316 Dining Chair, a robust and honest exemplar of where Scandinavian design was moving at the time.

Around the time of tenure with Hiorth & Østlyngen, Dsythe met his future wife, Trinelise Hauan, who had recently graduated from Copenhagen’s School of Interior Design, where she studied under Finn Juhl. Together they established a design studio in 1958 and delved quickly into freelance work, focusing chiefly on industry-adapted models. Among their first and ultimately most iconic designs was the steel and rosewood 1001 Armchair (1959) for Dokka Møbler, which eventually spawned five further iterations of the series. Lasting classics of Norwegian design, emblematic of the best of midcentury modernism, these pieces are further notable for having been heavily featured on the American TV series Mad Men.

In the 1960s Dysthe began experimenting with plastic moulding techniques and new materials like polyurethrane. His experimentation culminated in his first shell chair, the hemispherical Globus for Møre Lenestolfabrikk (1963). Soon after, Dysthe designed what would be his second tour-de-force, the Laminette Chair (1967), which sold more than 800,000 copies and garnered three prestigious awards: the Gold Medal at the 1968 Ljubljana Biennale, a Japanese G-Mark for good design, and the Norwegian Classic Award for Design Excellence.

Sven Ivar Dysthe received the Jacob award in 1989. In 2010, he was appointed a knight of the 1st grade of the Order of the Royal Norwegian St. Olavs. His works have been collected by many venerable institutions, such as the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the National Museum in Stockholm, and the National Museum in Oslo.

These model 1001 lounge fauteuils are ver beautiful and a set of lounge chairs that shows timeless design in any interior at any time. These model 1001 have been made in metal and wood frames but also in fully wooden frame. This set is the rare wooden frame chair and has new high class upholstery, handmade, with new Pirelli singles and high class leather. Original 1960s and fully restored.

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