Chair 611 (stacking side chair)
Alvar Aalto
Life Story
Chair 611 designed by Alvar Aalto is a stacking auditorium chair made of solid birch and was advertised as the ‘auditorium chair bar none’ when it came on the market in 1929. It is also known as the as the row chair. As with most of Aalto’s furniture designs Chair 611 was used to furnish a specific project and the chair was first used in the auditorium of Aalto’s Jyväskylä Defence Corps Building (1926-29).[1] The chair was ideal for furnishing public spaces because it was light and easy to move around and when not in use one could place the chairs in stacks on the side which meant that floor space could be freed which created a multifunctional space. Flexibility of expression was also possible to vary by either choosing varnish which left the qualities and the warmth of the wood visible or paint which gave the interior a more graphic expression so the chair could be used in many different projects.
Aalto stands as the creator of the Chair 611 but the chair is a product and a symbol of the close cooperation between the manufacturer Otto Korhonen (1884-1935) and the designer Aalto who first met in 1928. [2] The design of the stacking chair was actually an improved version of a stackable chair that Korhonen had created a few years earlier. Korhonen had placed the seat of an ordinary chair on top of legs extending to the sides which made it possible to stack the chair, After Aalto and Korhonen met in 1928 Aalto developed the prototype into an object that was more proportionate, aesthetic and commercial.
The chair also symbolizes the position of the designer around the 1930s – a period when the designer’s identity was of minor significance. In the development of standardized products, the technical expertise was so important that manufacturer often became more influential than the designer which also can be visible in the rather anonymous designs of this period. [3]
Korhonen was the technical director and owner of the furniture producer O.Y. Huonekalu-ja Rakennustuödehdas A.B who would later produce Aalto’s furniture. He was highly aware of the new requirements that industrialization, mass production and modern marketing meant for his company. The introduction of an even more industrialized production method meant that furniture became standardized objects and marked a move away from craftmanship but neither Korhonen nor Aalto seems to have wanted to compromise on the high quality which is visible in the materials that they used in their furniture. Focusing on good quality wood that many times was left visible under a layer of varnish. [4] Korhonen’s experience and technical knowhow would prove invaluable when Aalto developed his furniture later on during the 1930s. The furniture incorporated innovative production methods, local material and a new form language. [5]
Therese Wiles, June 2022
Further Reading
Lahti, Louna. Alvar Aalto, 1889-1976: Paradise For the Man in the Street (Köln: Taschen, 2019).
Mikonranta, Kaarina. “Alvar Aalto – Master of Variation” in Pirkko Tuukkanen ed. Alvar Aalto: Designer (Jyväskylä: Alvar Aalto Foundation, Alvar Aalto Museum, 2002).
Pallasmaa, Juhanni ed. Alvar Aalto: Furniture (Espoo; Museum of Finnish Architecture, 1984).
Schildt, Göran. Alvar Aalto: A Life’s Work – Architecture, Design and Art. (Helsinki: Otava Publ, 1994).
Tuukkanen, Pirkko ed. Alvar Aalto: Designer (Jyväskylä: Alvar Aalto Foundation, Alvar Aalto Museum, 2002).
Not on display
Title/Description: Chair 611 (stacking side chair)
Artist/Maker: Alvar Aalto
Born: 1929
Materials: Paint, Solid birch
Measurements: h 80 x w 48.3 x d 42.5 cm
Inscription: 'Finmar Ltd Design Reg 787811 Made in Finland'
Accession Number: 31285
Historic Period: 20th century
Production Place: Europe, Finland, Oy Huonekalu-ja Rakennustyötehdas Ab, Turku
Copyright: © Alvar Aalto Foundation
Alvar Aalto Exhibition Winter 2012, Jacksons Stockholm AB
Aalto was a prominent figure in the revival of "Organic Architecture", although his work began in the early 1930's with his more natural approach to functionalism, exemplified by his use of laminate bentwood and fluid lines. Known as "Human Modernism", Alvar Aalto's dialogue with nature, architecture, design, and the human being has become a living legacy.