A Well-kept Secret in Danish Design History

Furniture of exotic wood and sculptures of driftwood – at this summer's design auction we are exploring new areas of the design world. This is due to the Danish architect Jacob Hermann, who, until now, has not been known outside a very narrow circle of connoisseurs.

 

Jacob Hermann’s (1910-1995) furniture stands apart from what you normally associate with Danish design. With a raw and distinctive expression the pieces appear as a refreshing response to the stringent furniture classics of the more well-known names in Danish design history.

An Uncompromising Approach to Design

In many ways, one can compare Hermann with another eccentric within Danish furniture design – Peder Moos. Their common starting point was a lifelong fascination of wood as a material, and they were as uncompromising as any in their approach to design and craftsmanship. With Hermann and Moos, the boundaries between furniture and sculpture were broken down. But even though they had a common starting point, the results of their efforts were widely different.

Moos' approach to design was as a cabinetmaker, and his extreme control of the craft led to the most sublime and formidable furniture pieces, where nothing was left to chance. Hermann was a cabinetmaker as well, but he was also educated later on as an architect at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen. Unlike Moos, Hermann let the wood determine the shape of the furniture. In order to promote the organic and living quality of the wood, he often went as far as to leave some of the material unprocessed in his furniture.

American Inspiration and Dovetail Joints

With his unusual approach, Hermann is a unique figure in Danish design history, but in international terms there are a few other designers who inspired Hermann. Most importantly, the famous American architect George Nakashima who in a similar manner worked with a raw and unprocessed idiom. A distinctive feature of both Hermann and Nakashima is the visible dovetail joint, the function of which is to prevent the wooden boards from breaking, but at the same time these joints provide a beautiful and prominent appendix on the furniture. Hermann lived most of his life on the west coast of Jutland, and in the midst of this often harsh environment he created his unique furniture during the 1960s and 1970s. Most of the pieces were created without a commercial purpose and were instead made for his family and close friends. The auction includes six of Hermann's works – tables and benches of Caucasian walnut and Bubinga wood, as well as two sculptures made of driftwood.

Preview and Auction

Auction: 4 June at 4 pm in Bredgade 33, Copenhagen

Preview: 24-28 May at the same address

View all the auction lots with work by Jacob Hermann
View all the auction lots with design
Read more about the auction
Read more about bidding

 

For further information, please contact:

Peter Kjelgaard: +45 8818 1191 · pkj@bruun-rasmussen.dk

Ole Ravn: +45 8818 1192 · olr@bruun-rasmussen.dk

Amalie Hansen: +45 8818 1194 · amh@bruun-rasmussen.dk

Anna Berger Widenborg: +45 8818 1187 · awi@bruun-rasmussen.dk

Andreas Krabbe: +45 8818 1193 · ank@bruun-rasmussen.dk

Poul Svalgaard Henriksen: +45 8818 1132 · psh@bruun-rasmussen.dk