When Danish Modern Style Ruled
In the 1940s, during World War II, Danish designers were prominent leaders in the movement to design and make affordable, functional, elegant furniture. Danish designer Kaare Klint (1888–1954) is today considered the father of modern Danish design. He helped establish the Department of Furniture Design at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, and taught and inspired some of the designers who would go on to be stars of the Danish modern style movement. Among his students and followers were Hans Wegner, Arne Jacobsen, Mogens Koch, and Poul Kjaerholm, all luminaries of Danish modern design’s golden age.
Like the designers at Germany’s Bauhaus, Klint believed that function should guide form. As early as the 1910s, he combined traditional Danish furniture-making techniques with a streamlined minimalist aesthetic. This led to a simple yet refined style that emphasized well-crafted, high-quality furnishings.
Mass-Produced, Affordable & Chic
World War II made good furniture-making materials scarce, so Danish designers turned to inexpensive, accessible, and versatile plywood. Their innovative construction methods elevated this humble material. They implemented mass production techniques that let them create stylish, inexpensive furniture on a large scale. They then exported it to the world. In post-war Europe and in the U.S., minimalist yet sensuously curvy Danish furniture designs were suddenly accessible, and often affordable.
Danish Furniture Design Innovators
Furniture designers Arne Jacobsen and Hans Wegner were strongly influenced by the bent plywood designs of American husband-and-wife design team Charles and Ray Eames. Works by Jacobsen (who designed the iconic and curvaceous Drop, Egg, and Swan chairs) and Wegner (known for his Wishbone and Round chair designs) were much in demand during the 1950s and 1960s, when midcentury modernism (also known as MCM style) was the leading interior design style. Fellow Dane Finn Juhl’s highly sought-after pieces were especially sculptural, and sometimes colorful. His chairs, sofas, desks, and tables were by turns whimsical, serious, or sexy, and they helped to establish Danish modern as a major force in midcentury America.
From the late 1960s through the 1990s, Danish furniture exports dropped. The Danish modern boom of the 1950s and 1960s had saturated the market. Furthermore, Danish modern furniture’s reputation for quality was lost in the 1970s as Denmark began exporting cheaper versions. Other countries created and sold knock-offs as well, and Danish modern furniture lost its cachet.
To learn more about the enduring popularity of midcentury modern (MCM style, read my article on Midcentury Modern Interior Design.
Danish Modern Housewares & Decor
In addition to Danish furniture pieces, Danish modern decor elements were also highly prized in the fifties and sixties. Sinuous teak trays and huge round wooden salad bowls were musts at dinner parties. Stainless steel serving pieces showed up at every potluck, barbecue, and cocktail party. Danish lamps and other light fixtures often featured teak and stainless steel. Ceramic decor items by Danish artisans brought earthy, textural elements into midcentury homes.
Danish designers like Jens Harald Quistgaard created earthy, solid, organic forms in metal and ceramic as well as in wood. Often asymmetrical, roughly formed, and highly textured, his ceramics took inspiration from forms found in nature.
Leaf-shaped Danish wooden serving trays and bowls by Quistgaard and other designers of this period still abound in second-hand shops. Quistgaard’s large, bold, thick-sided salad bowls of the 1950s and 1960s have had a resurgence in popularity recent years. Vintage versions are in demand, as are modern versions still in production.
Dansk International
In 1954, Martha and Ted Nierenberg of the U.S. discovered Quistgaard’s teak and stainless steel flatware on a trip to Copenhagen. They convinced him to let them mass-produce pieces based on his designs for the U.S. market, and their new company, Dansk, was born. The flatware was such a success that Dansk and Quistgaard continued their association for decades. By the 1980s, Quistgaard had designed over 4,000 items for Dansk. The company became known to the U.S. market as the source for the latest in Danish modern design.
Danish Modern Today
Vintage Danish Modern furniture and home decor pieces in good condition can fetch hefty prices at auctions or online marketplaces. They can fit seamlessly into modern homes furnished in midcentury modern, Japandi, Scandi, minimalist, or contemporary styles. You can still find some bargains on these pieces at thrift or furniture consignment stores or at online auctions. If you’ve got the cash, stores like Design Within Reach sell gorgeous new contemporary Danish modern pieces. If you’re on a less lavish budget, you can find more affordable modern pieces inspired by Danish modern design at retailers like Room & Board, West Elm, and Rove Concepts.
Sustainable & affordable Danish modern
Lanoba Design makes it possible to own a reconditioned piece of genuine Danish modern furniture at a reasonable price. Danish-born Lars Noah Balderskilde goes to Denmark every year to source original vintage Danish modern pieces with good lines. He ships them to the U.S., and he and his husband and business partner David Singh refurbish the pieces. They then resell them in the U.S.
Lanoba sells some vintage pieces in as-is condition. The company refurbishes others for buyers who are willing to pay an additional 20%. Even when refinished, reupholstered, or otherwise repaired, these pieces end up costing about the same as a high-quality modern reproduction. However, the reconditioned pieces have the provenance and cachet of being original vintage midcentury furnishings. By making beautiful vintage pieces available to today’s lovers of Danish modern style, Lanoba provides a sustainable alternative that keeps furniture out of landfills, and gives historic pieces a whole new life.
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Iconic midcentury chairs on display at the Danish Museum of Art & Design in 2018 | Helen Ilus for Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)