Josef Franks wallpaper designs created from 1920 to 1950 have proved timeless. We can still get these Scandinavian Modern classics from two companies!
Explore Neville Trickett's 4536 photos on Flickr!
One of the first “new” textile designers I discovered on our trip was Josef Frank. I use the word new loosely as Josef Frank (1885-1967) is wildly popular in the textile design world, b…
In an exhibition opening at London's Fashion and Textile Museum, Josef Frank’s bodacious midcentury prints are blooming here, there, and everywhere
Josef Frank, 1980s
Explore Neville Trickett's 4536 photos on Flickr!
J’aime les artistes complets. Joseph Frank était un grand architecte et un designer de génie de la première...
It is the end of another year and there's been many changes at Cooper Hewitt. We've installed new galleries and one part of the new infrastructure are new interactive experiences through which to explore our collection as it gets digitized. As collections become available through these new interfaces, the objects that people explore or want
The story of the Swedish design shop SVENSKT TENN in Stockholm is truly a remarkable tale. In 1924, a 30 year old art teacher and ...
Explore Neville Trickett's 4536 photos on Flickr!
On April 2 and 3 Villa Beer built between 1929 and 1931 Josef Frank’s Viennese masterpiece and a prime example of the Modernist architectural style will open to
If the long cold winter is getting you down, I can thoroughly recommend a visit to the Fashion and Textile Museum to see “Josef Frank: Patterns – Furniture – Painting”. The…
If the long cold winter is getting you down, I can thoroughly recommend a visit to the Fashion and Textile Museum to see “Josef Frank: Patterns – Furniture – Painting”. The…
If you're a lover of colorful and original prints, you've probably come across the designs of Josef Frank more than once.
In an exhibition opening at London's Fashion and Textile Museum, Josef Frank’s bodacious midcentury prints are blooming here, there, and everywhere
Explore Neville Trickett's 4536 photos on Flickr!
A look back at the life and legacy of Josef Frank, a pioneer of Swedish Modern design whose colorful patterns are beloved around the world.
If the long cold winter is getting you down, I can thoroughly recommend a visit to the Fashion and Textile Museum to see “Josef Frank: Patterns – Furniture – Painting”. The…
Though this pattern is titled Under Ekvatorn or Beneath the Equator, the design and textile were both produced in Sweden. Frank’s use of brightly colored flowers on a black background suggests a warm
[gallery type=rectangular ids=2592,2571,2567] In 1933 the 48 year old architect and designer Josef Frank (1885-1967) fled to Stockholm from Vienna in the dawn of the growing National Socialism. He was of Jewish ancestry and as so many others feared to remain in his native country. Given his wife was born in Finland but raised in Stockholm, this was a logical choice. But there was yet another strong incentive. By this time he was already an established and celebrated designer, co-founder of the company Haus und Garten, teacher at the Vienna School of Arts, and a founding member of the Vienna Werkbund. In 1924, when he established Haus und Garten, a young Swedish designer, Estrid Ericson, founded a company in Stockholm called Svenskt Tenn. Three years later it moved to Strandvägen 5 in Stockholm where you can still find it today. Svenskt Tenn was to become one of the greatest influences ever seen in Swedish design and one of the main reasons would be Josef Frank! [gallery type=rectangular ids=2591] The design of Josef Frank is without question to be compared with William Morris, one of the greatest design pioneers of all times. No pictures can ever reproduce the vibrant colours of Frank's textiles or wallpapers and entering the showroom of Svenskt Tenn just blows your mind every time! His colour stories are extremely bold and flamboyant, the motifs are flowing and organic yet balanced. It's a joy to see all the clever thoughts he put into each design and its repeats. Above you see two of his most popular patterns, Brazil and Nippon. Right underneath a drawing for the pattern Mignon. Seeing this master drawing I'm stunned by the skills and artistry designers possessed back in the days before any undo buttons existed! Less known is that he also designed furniture and in 1932 Estrid Ericson commissioned drawings for furniture pieces from Frank to be produced for Svensk Tenn. Seeing what was happening in Germany and Austria at the time she offered him a full-time employment the year after. He accepted and the rest is history. They proved to be a dream team and made instant success with their new home décor style. Frank was, when young, one of the front members of the Vienna modernism but didn't really like the way it developed. He opposed to the programmatic principles formulated by Le Corbusier among others. He wanted to bring nature with all its shapes and colours into home decoration in order to make the space feel more vivid and open. Of the same reason he preferred furniture that one could see through, like a chair with an open backboard. [gallery type=rectangular ids=2586,2627] [gallery type=rectangular ids=2613,2583] During the war Frank spent a period in the United States where many of his celebrated patterns were created, one of the best known might be Manhattan. With the participation in the World Exhibition in New York,1939, Josef Frank and Svenskt Tenn would become a synonym for the Swedish Modern. To me, Josef Frank stands as a shining lighthouse on the sea of surface pattern design and he is an infinite source of inspiration! [gallery type=circle ids=2607,2588] All images by Svenskt Tenn if nothing else is stated