Exhibition: Surviving long into the future
---50 chairs passing down their DNA
―From the collection of Keiji Nagai―

July 26 (Fri) ー November 24 (Sun), 2019
Venue |ATELIER MUJI GINZA

ATELIER MUJI GINZA Gallery 1 will hold an exhibition of 50 chairs that pass down their DNA to the future inherited from a single chair that has been in production for the longest time in the history of modern design.

The starting point of the story is Chair No. 14 made in 1859 by Gebrüder Thonet in Vienna that laid the foundation for mass production by perfecting the new technology of bending solid wood. The chair was received with great surprise at the time for a structure and design that eliminated unnecessary parts and reduced transportation costs to a minimum thanks to its knock-down structure. Chair No. 14 sees its 160th anniversary this year.

The bentwood furniture maker Gebrüder Thonet increased the number of its factories in areas abundant in beechwood and mass produced chairs while expanding variations. In the 1920s, Thonet further contributed to production of chairs made with bent tubular steel devised by Marcel Lajos Breuer and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe in cooperation with Bauhaus, and played a part in the production of cantilever chairs that became another structural revolution after bent-wood chairs.
The wood bending and tubular steel bending technology spread globally, and many unique chairs using these methods have been made in Japan as well.

In this exhibition, a chair is considered to an organism, and an attempt is made to visualize its network of DNA through 50 chairs made with bending technologies. It will also be a rare opportunity where design archetypes and variations, remix, and outstanding models are assembled under a single roof.
Ways of looking at “new” designs may change when the continuing “tree of life” of chairs is deciphered. We would be delighted if we could share with you this opportunity to contemplate the secrets behind objects that are not merely consumed and discarded but live long, useful lives.


ATELIER MUJI GINZA

Time

10:00 - 21:00

Venue

ATELIER MUJI GINZA

MUJI Ginza 6F, 3-3-5 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo
*Admission free

Credits

  • Organizer
    • MUJI
  • Cooperation
    • Keiji Nagai (Interior designer)
  • Graphic design
    • Yuko Higashikawa
  • Photo
    • Takashi Chishiki
  • Site construction
    • HIGURE 17-15 cas
  • Planning and Management
    • Household Division / Household Design, Ryohin Keikaku Co., Ltd. and ATELIER MUJI GINZA (MUJI GINZA)

Keiji Nagai collection

The exhibits in Gallery 1 have been borrowed from a vast post-war modern design collection personally handpicked over the last 50 years by Keiji Nagai, interior designer, who devoted much time and effort to it. Nagai was born in Karatsu, Saga in 1948. Having founded his design studio “KEY & DESIGN ASSOCIATES” in 1982, he has contributed to many cultural exchanges inside and outside of Japan and was awarded the “Furniture prize” from Denmark. In Gallery 1, we will hold exhibitions borrowing a different part of the Nagai collection for each.

Exhibition List

ATELIER MUJI GINZA

ATELIER MUJI, named by Ikko Tanaka, a graphic designer and former art director of MUJI, embodies the role of "a workshop that returns to the roots of living while seeking inspiration for the future." This forward-thinking initiative, envisioned by Ryohin Keikaku, serves as a cultural intersection, hosting curated exhibitions and events across diverse themes, including art and design.