Mr Alvar Aalto

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Mr Alvar Aalto

Words by Mr Nick Compton

7 October 2015

Mr Alvar Aalto sketching in Studio Aalto, Helsinki, in the 1960s © Alvar Aalto Museum

Mr Aalto's designs, including the "Tank" Armchair are on display at the Triennale di Milano, 1936 © Artek (artek.fi)

"Artek products know what they are, but they don’t shout… There is a poetic simplicity to them”

Steam-bent beauty: the ingenious Type 26 Armchair (1932); the Y805 Table (1946) featuring Mr Aalto's compound Y-shaped leg © Artek (artek.fl)

National Pensions Institute in Helsinki, 1956 © Artek (artek.fi)

Aalto: Six Key Works

Completed in 1935, in what was then Viipuri in Finland and is now Vyborg in Russia, the work was rewarded with the World Monuments Fund/Knoll Modernism Prize for the preservation of a modern landmark.

Artek co-founder Ms Maire Gullichsen and her husband Mr Harry Gullichsen gave Mr Aalto creative carte blanche with their country retreat in Noormarkku, which was completed in 1939.

Imagine a stool and you will probably picture Mr Aalto’s perfectly simple Stool 60. It was radical when it was designed in 1933. Now commonplace, it features his innovative bentwood L-shaped leg.

Nobody uses it as a tea trolley anymore, perhaps they never did. But Mr Aalto’s 1936 Tea Trolley 901, whatever it is used for, has been a favourite of modern-minded homemakers since its launch.

Designed in 1932 for the Paimio Sanatorium, Armchair 41 is one of Mr Aalto’s earliest furniture designs, but, devoid of sharp angles, it has become one of his most iconic.

Armchair 400, also known as the "Tank" chair and designed in 1936, showcases Mr Aalto’s mastery of bentwood. Here, he uses it to create a sculptural, but comfortable, cantilevered frame.