Nyhavn Dining Table
Designer: Finn Juhl 1953
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 3.740,00
Butterfly Table
Designer: Finn Juhl 1949
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
€ 6.035,00
Table Bench
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1953
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 2.415,00
Panel System
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1953
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
from € 1.350,00 up
Nyhavn Desk
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1945
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 2.050,00
France Chair
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1956
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 3.415,00
Chieftain Sofa
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1949
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
from € 22.715,00 up
Chieftain Chair
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1949
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 14.460,00
Pelican Table
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1940
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
from € 1.950,00 up
Pelican Chair
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1940
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 5.750,00
Poet Sofa
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1941
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 8.685,00
Baker Sofa
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1951
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 13.995,00
Tray Table
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1965
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 990,00
Wall Sofa
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1950
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 9.895,00
Reading Chair
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1953
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 1.065,00
Silver Table
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1948
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 8.400,00
Egyptian Chair
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1949
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 3.650,00
Chieftain Stool
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1949
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 2.565,00
109 Armchair
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1946
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 2.535,00
108 Chair
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1946
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 1.560,00
Kaufmann Table
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1945
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 11.715,00
46 Chair
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1946
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 2.995,00
500 Couch Table
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1958
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 2.760,00
Japan Series
Designer: Finn Juhl, 1953
Manufacturer: House of Finn Juhl
starting at € 3.200,00
Finn Juhl Furniture Collection
Evolution, not revolution – this is the motto that Danish furniture design followed in the early 20th century. Until the young architect and designer Finn Juhl stepped on the scene and stirred things up with his daring concepts.
The revolution could have been a different one: fascinated by the plastic works of Henry Moore, Hans Arp, Barbara Hepworth and Erik Thommesen, Finn Juhl initially had wanted to become an art historian. His father, however, convinced him to take on studies of architecture at the Royal Danish Academy of Arts, possibly as this would promise a more reliable source of income.
Between 1930 and 1934, Juhl attended the academy, but left school without a degree. During his studies, he had taken a job with the leading architect of Danish modernism, Vilhelm Lauritzen, working on a broad range of interesting projects, including interior design.
Starting in 1937, Finn Juhl began realizing his first chair designs alongside the cabinetmaker Niels Vodder. Danish furniture design at the time was dominated by the ideas of Kaare Klint, who stood for a clear and formal design vocabulary, along the lines of Neue Sachlichkeit.
Furniture was thought up with a primary focus on function, the lines were straight and the material, mostly nordic hardwoods, curbed most daring forms.
To cabinetmakers, it mattered that the constructions were clearly visible to allow a better look at refined ligatures and bold statics.
It does therefore not come as a surprise that this focus on expediency resulted in few revolutionary pieces and challenged a young Finn Juhl to break those boundaries which until then had gone uncontradicted.
What followed was a productive phase with many designs showcasing Juhls love for organic shapes and floating constructions in an artful manner. The Bone Chair (FJ44) is said to be his personal favorite design. It got its name from its intricate curved shape, seeming like a naturally grown support structure – brilliant and natural like a skeleton providing mobility and support to the body.
For his first own design office in Copenhagen he designed the wonderfully graceful Nyhavn desk (BO69) in 1945. A wooden tabletop on an oxidized steel frame, whose four slim legs end with wooden feet. Later on, he designed an iconic drawer unit for this desk. These drawers have different colors and are suspended underneath the tabletop.
Another milestone is the FJ45 Chair, whose construction is remarkable in the sense that Juhl and Vodder achieved a visual separation between the upholstery and the supporting structure. At the time of its conception, the chair could only be made by hand, much like most of his designs. The characteristic teak wood, today synonymous with Scandinavian design, was attainable only after the second World War. Troop movements during the confrontations between the U.S. and Japan in the Philippines resulted in large areas being cleared of the precious wood. While the reason for the export was terrible, the designers quickly recognized the quality of this raw material: The exotic wood is extraordinarily hard and captivates with its beautiful grain and naturally dark hue.
A favorable publishing in the American interior design magazine “Interiors” in 1948 was the starting point for the designer’s big success in the U.S. From 1951 onward, Baker Furniture produced 24 exclusive Finn Juhl designs adjusted for industrial production – of course, only after the designer was able to personally inspect the high quality standards on site during production.
This collaboration and the therefore increased visibility opened the door of the American market to Danish design, and helped shape the impact it has since had in furniture history.
In the late sixties, the designer’s success came to a halt; new materials and ideas had surfaced, more suited to the Zeitgeist. A democratization of furniture design through lower production cost garnered importance in the public perception.
Part of being a classic is being rediscovered.
This happened to Finn Juhl in the 1990s. Original pieces caused bidding wars at auctions – an original Pelican Chair changed hands for 57.000 USD in 2002.
These days, no one questions the impact of his designs, they form part of the collections of the most renowned design museums in the world.
Since the 2000s, the manufacturer House of Finn Juhl has taken on re-issuing Juhl’s designs. The originals were individual items which did not always match the drafts exactly. Each piece carried its cabinetmaker’s individual note.
Today’s challenge is to understand the designer’s idea and to play on it in its truest sense for form and production. The production is mostly based in Denmark in an effort to keep tradition and meet standards of quality and durability. Much of the upholstery is done by hand, the making of the sophisticated wooden constructions is supported by modern technology in our digital age, aiding in making Finn Juhl furniture even more precise.
Are you curious to find out more? We are happy to offer the Finn Juhl collection exclusively in Munich and are looking forward to showing you around the hand-picked pieces in our showroom.