Heart Cone Chair
The design career of Verner Panton reached its first peak toward the end of the 1950s. With a furniture series based on simple geometric shapes, Panton anticipated elements of Pop Art, while also emulating the elegance of Scandinavian Modernism in the execution of the bases.
The most famous designs from this series are the Cone Chair and the Heart Cone Chair. The Heart Cone Chair takes its name from its heart-shaped silhouette. The extended wings of the backrest are reminiscent of Mickey Mouse ears, but can also be interpreted as a contemporary development of the classic wingback chair.
About Designer | |
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Verner Panton |
Verner Panton, born in Gamtofte, Denmark, studied at
Odense Technical College before enrolling at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine
Arts in Copenhagen as an architecture student. He worked from 1950-1952 in the
architectural firm of Arne Jacobsen and founded an independent studio for
architecture and design in 1955. He first attracted wider attention with the
geometric forms of his furniture designs for the firm Plus-linje. In the
following years Panton created numerous designs for seating furniture and lighting.
Verner Panton's passion for bright colours and
geometric patterns manifested itself in an extensive range of textile designs.
By fusing the elements of a room – floor, walls, ceiling, furnishings,
lighting, textiles and wall panels made of enamel or plastic – into a unified
gesamtkunstwerk, Panton's interior installations have attained legendary
status. The most famous examples are the 'Visiona' ship installations for the
Cologne Furniture Fair (1968 and 1970), the Spiegel publishing headquarters in Hamburg
(1969) and the Varna restaurant in Aarhus (1970). |