Hans J. Wegner - craftsman, designer, visionary
Master of the chair - hardly any obituary for the Danish furniture designer Hans Jørgensen Wegner does without this title. By the time of his death in 2007, he had produced almost 500 chair designs - an impressive creative output that can indeed only be described with such a tribute. With his functional, reduced furniture, he shaped the design aesthetics of a generation and reconciled innovation with tradition. About a man who made the art of sitting his life's work.
Wegner was born in 1914 in Tønder, a small Danish town not far from the German-Danish border. During his apprenticeship as a carpenter, he came into contact with wood for the first time and showed his creative talent early on. Driven by his enthusiasm for design, he later moved to Copenhagen as a young man, studied there at the School of Applied Arts and immersed himself in the world of shaping and creating. Wegner's name quickly became associated with extraordinary designs. His furniture seemed to be ahead of its time and in 1940 he received a prestigious commission: tables and chairs for the new town hall of Aarhus, designed by Arne Jacobsen and Erik Møller - a project that would open many doors for Hans J. Wegner.
In the same year, the collaboration with master carpenter Johannes Hansen, a driving force within the golden age of Danish midcentury design, begins. Then everything happens very quickly. Wegner's style is more in demand than ever and so he founds his own design studio in 1943. Nevertheless, he did not lose sight of the craftsmanship aspect of his work until the end. Many manufacturers knock on his door and want special designs from his pen - especially chairs, of course. In the end, however, it is the cooperation with the furniture workshop of master carpenter Carl Hansen in which Wegner's most successful ideas are to be turned into reality: The birth of the CH24.