Earn Money On Facebook, Twitter, Instagram Join Now!
Posts

Max Lamb’s New Min Chair Achieves Maximum Character with Minimal Means

Decoranytime

Max Lamb’s New Min Chair Achieves Maximum Character with Minimal Means

For well over a decade, British designer Max Lamb has been challenging the code and conduct of a contemporary furniture industry still mired in Modernist convention and the bottom-line economic model of often-disjointed mass manufacturing. Defined by a reinterpretation and revitalization of age-old craft techniques, the provocateur has carved, sand-cast, molded, and folded an approach all his own: one predicated on finding fresh applications for salvaged components and those unexpected natural elements no one before him deemed suitable.

Minimalist dining room with a wooden table and chairs, a textured wall, pendant light fixture, and simple decor including a vase with flowers and ceramic pieces.

For Lamb—like Augustus Pugin and the proponents of the Arts and Crafts movement—aesthetics, and perhaps also function, should always be the outcome of making and reflective of the inherent properties of the materials incorporated. This career-defining proposition is fundamentally sustainable. Little processing or adulteration is necessary.

A minimalist dining area with a wooden table, four matching chairs, a small rug, and a vase with red flowers under a modern wall light fixture.

A lot of that results in roughly hewn formations—rock settees where the function of sitting is just barely decipherable—but that isn’t always the case in Lamb’s work. Take the long-developed Economy Chair, now called the Min Chair. In this design, pinewood beams, all in the same dimension, are carefully cut at just the right angle and fitted together in an exacting and bold assembly. The approach is as rudimentary as it is hyper-engineered.

A wooden table with matching wooden chairs sits on a textured woven rug in a room with concrete and wooden surfaces.

Put into serial production by innovative Swedish brand Hem—translating a self-build logic into a scalable model—the Min Chair is the result of intensive trial and error: research into attaining maximum character with minimal means. There’s no extraneous energy exerted in systematically cutting and assembling the modular components, and so, in turn, no superfluous decorative detail is added. The design is unabashedly sculptural but also straightforward in ontologically self-communicating its purpose, deftly turning the Modernist tenet of form following function on its head.

A close-up view of a wooden table with three geometric wooden chairs on a woven rug.

“This is an exciting continuation of our work with Max,” says Petrus Palmér, Hem founder and CEO. He and his team have collaborated with Lamb since beginning to develop his Last Stool product in the early 2010s. Hem works with a tight roster of talents, ones it has returned to time and again over the years. “As editor, our role was to bring this iteration into production without compromising the idea.”

A minimalist wooden chair with geometric lines is placed against a textured beige wall on a wooden floor, illuminated by soft natural light.

A minimalist wooden chair with sharp geometric lines sits on a wooden floor against a textured concrete wall, illuminated by soft natural light.

A workbench with stacked wooden boards, folded fabrics, brushes, and assorted art supplies, with containers of tools and colorful yarn overhead. Artwork and sketches are pinned to the wall.

A man in a workshop examines unfinished wooden boards on a workbench, with woodworking tools and equipment visible in the background.

A man in a workshop aligns two pieces of wood, assembling a wooden structure on a workbench with tools and equipment in the background.

A man in a workshop uses a clamp on wooden pieces at a workbench surrounded by woodworking tools and machines.

A man in a workshop uses a hand tool to shape a wooden chair, with wood shavings on the floor and unfinished chairs nearby.

A man stands in a workshop holding a wooden chair, surrounded by other colorful and uniquely designed chairs and shelves.

A minimalist wooden chair with a rectangular seat, a geometric backrest featuring a square cutout, and flat, wide legs, placed on a concrete floor against a wooden wall.

A man in a black sweatshirt and jeans sits on a light wooden chair with his legs crossed, looking down and touching the side of the chair.

To see this and other works by the designer, visit maxlamb.org.

Photography by Erik Lefvander.



Post a Comment

FANTESTICRYAN Small Animal Statues Home Decor Modern Style Black Decorative Ornaments for Living Room, Bedroom, Office Desktop, Cabinets…BUY NOW

Night Lights Plug into Wall 4-Pack, DIY Artificial Tree Lamp Ophanie Area Rugs for Bedroom Living Room Decorative Throw Pillow Covers 18x18

Click Image For More Details

More Post

  • A Mid-Century Eichler Home Gets Respectfully Updated for 21st Century
  • A Unique, Modern House That’s Designed To Respect the Landscape
  • PatBO Offices – New York City
  • 10 Modern Black Kitchens That Will Tempt You to the Dark Side
  • Pinterest Offices – Toronto
  • The TUBA Chair Is a Tubular Symphony of Aluminum
  • Earn Money On Facebook, Twitter, Instagram Join Now!
    Cookie Consent
    We serve cookies on this site to analyze traffic, remember your preferences, and optimize your experience.
    Oops!
    It seems there is something wrong with your internet connection. Please connect to the internet and start browsing again.
    AdBlock Detected!
    We have detected that you are using adblocking plugin in your browser.
    The revenue we earn by the advertisements is used to manage this website, we request you to whitelist our website in your adblocking plugin.
    Site is Blocked
    Sorry! This site is not available in your country.