Axel Einar Hjorth Round Coffee Table for Nordiska Kompaniet, Sweden 1937 (sold)
Axel Einar Hjorth Round Coffee Table for Nordiska Kompaniet, Sweden 1937 (sold)
This rare coffee table was designed by Axel Einar Hjorth in January 1937 and was manufactured by Nordiska Kompaniet (lit. The Nordic Company) in Stockholm, Sweden.
Stockholm based furniture manufacturer and department store, Nordiska Kompaniet (1902-) produced many of the 20th century’s now iconic Swedish works, including many of Hjorth’s furniture designs. Hjorth was the head of the furniture department and designed this table for the 1937 "Spring Show" of the department store.
The table base is made of solid wood. The round tabletop is veneered and is supported by four spider-like legs in the style of Swedish Grace. Elegant and refined, yet delightfully simple is the core of this style. The brief, but remarkable period in Swedish design history, Swedish Grace’s pieces were all hand-made with extraordinary craftsmanship. The most representative designs of Swedish Grace include Hjorth’s designs such as this table. It is one of Hjorth’s most slender works and together with his more common “Utö” and “Lovö” series belongs to the best of his oeuvre.
Along with Bruno Mathsson, Hjorth was one of few designers to be honoured with the privilege to be an exhibitor at the Swedish Pavilion during the 1937 “Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne, Paris”. It is suggested that this table was part of the Swedish Pavilion’s interior, but unfortunately very few photos were taken by officials at the time, so for now, this shall stay a hypothesis.
The table has a label marked NK R 40275 - C 7637.
SOLD
Condition:
In good vintage condition. Wear consistent with age and use. The top has some marks, light scratches and discolouration.
Dimensions:
27.56 in Ø x 21.86 in H
70 cm Ø x 55.5 cm H
Literature:
Nordiska Museet’s Digital Catalogue
About the designer:
Axel Einar Hjorth was born March 7, 1888 in Krokek outside Norrköping. From 1908, he studied in Stockholm at the Högre Konstindustriella Skolan (University of Arts, Crafts and Design later to be "Konstfack"). His career in furniture design started around 1920, when Hjorth started working at Nordiska Kompaniet under the architect and designer Carl Bergsten.
Hjorth worked as the head of the assembly section of Jubileumsutställningen (the Jubilee Exhibition) in Gothenburg 1923. The English critic P. Morton Shand has characterized this exhibition as the be- ginning of the breakthrough of Swedish decorative arts. "The Gothenburg Exhibition of 1923 revealed [...] that [Sweden was] almost the only one that really counted as far as design and craftmanship were concerned."
For more than 10 years, from October 1927, Axel Einar Hjorth acted as the chief designer/architect at Nordiska Kompaniet. During the years between the wars, Nordiska Kompaniet was one of the most important furniture producers in Sweden and above all, the most exclusive one. Nordiska Kompaniet and Axel Einar Hjorth took part in most of the important national as well as international exhibitions of that time.
The position as chief architect at Nordiska Kompaniet also meant that he received quite a few commissions to create interiors although the company had a separate department for this purpose. Among the most striking commissions performed by Axel Einar Hjorth were the railway trains of the Shah of Persia and Nordiska Kompaniet's Paris shop. Axel Einar Hjorth left Nordiska Kompaniet in order to start his own business in February 1938.
Hjorth’s work that oftentimes mixed Art Deco and Modernist influences, remains highly relevant even sixty years after his death. ~H.