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Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Jonas Bohlin, 'Concrete' armchair, 1981

Jonas Bohlin

'Concrete' armchair, 1981
Concrete and iron
height 90, width 49 cm, depth 57 cm, seat height 45.5 cm.

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Edition: this chair is one of the artist's proofs and bears the inscription Provex / JB besides the artist’s proof, it was produced in an edition of 100 numbered pieces...
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Edition: this chair is one of the artist's proofs and bears the inscription Provex / JB besides the artist’s proof, it was produced in an edition of 100 numbered pieces

Jonas Bohlin (b. 1953) is a qualified interior designer, and “Concrete” was presented as part of his graduation project in the Konstfacksskolen graduation exhibition in 1981. With this, Bohlin’s name was “set in concrete” in the international design world, because this provocative chair kick-started a debate that continued well into the 1990s. The question was: Should a piece of furniture have a function?

One thing is for sure: Bohlin’s chair is not comfortable to sit in. It is made of two concrete slabs surrounded by a steel tube. It crosses the line between sculpture and furniture by breaking free from the functional demands to which furniture design has forever been subject. Quite simply, it jars with the conventional perception of a piece of furniture.

Although the chair was the talk of the town back then, it did not sell. The general public simply were not asking for “Concrete”. For that, the chair looked too complicated and only had limited utility value for sitting in. Sven Lundh, owner of the renowned furniture company Källemo of Småland, Sweden, once remarked:

“We put one out on the street overnight, and it was still there in the morning.”

Paradoxically, however, “Concrete” assumed classic status from the outset. This is the piece of furniture most likely to spring to mind when people cast their minds back to the furniture design of the 1980s. It distils the essence of the emancipation and playful approach to design of that decade. Bohlin later wrote this about his chair:

“Concrete. My first piece of furniture. There’s no getting away from it, even twenty years on. A balancing act of structure and geometry; an encounter of mind and matter”.

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Provenance

Edition: this chair is one of the artist's proofs and bears the inscription Provex / JB besides the artist’s proof, it was produced in an edition of 100 numbered pieces

The "Concrete" chair was unveiled as part of Jonas Bohlin's project during the graduation exhibition at Konstfacksskolen in 1981. This bold design firmly established Bohlin's reputation in the international design scene, as it sparked a debate that lasted into the 1990s: Should furniture serve a function?

One undeniable fact is that Bohlin's chair is far from comfortable. Constructed from two concrete slabs held together by a steel tube, it blurs the lines between sculpture and furniture by defying the functional constraints traditionally associated with furniture design. It challenges the conventional understanding of what a piece of furniture should be.

“Concrete. My first piece of furniture. There’s no escaping it, even twenty years later. A balancing act of structure and geometry; an encounter of mind and matter.”

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