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Arne Vodder 404

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Danish Rio Rosewood Desk Model 404 by Arne Vodder for Sibast Mobler, 1960
By Arne Vodder, Sibast
Located in JOINVILLE-LE-PONT, FR
Superb Scandinavian Management desk. Very well made piece of furniture with clean and very elegant lines. A large drawer for hanging files and a small drawer on the right side, a nic...
Category

Vintage 1960s Danish Scandinavian Modern Desks

Materials

Rosewood

Danish Leather & Rosewood Model 404 Chair by Arne Vodder for P. Olsen for Sibast
By Arne Vodder, Sibast
Located in JOINVILLE-LE-PONT, FR
Superb Scandinavian armchair for office or living room. Very well made piece of furniture with clean and very elegant lines. Designed in 1960, this armchair is referenced on the Desi...
Category

Vintage 1960s Danish Scandinavian Modern Armchairs

Materials

Leather, Rosewood

Set of Leather Model 404 Chair by Arne Vodder, Denmark, ca. 1958
By Arne Vodder
Located in Geneva, CH
Set of 4 chairs by Arne Vodder produced by Sibast ca. 1958.
Category

Vintage 1950s Danish Chairs

Materials

Leather, Fruitwood

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Arne Vodder for sale on 1stDibs

Along with Vernor Panton, cabinetmaker and architect Arne Vodder was a leading light of what might be called the “second generation” of forward-thinking 20th-century Danish furniture designers — those who, following in the footsteps of Hans Wegner, Arne Jacobsen, Finn Juhl and others, first applied the skills, traditions and philosophical tenets of Scandinavian craftsmanship to a modern furniture idiom.

As a graduate student in architecture trained by pioneering furniture designer Finn Juhl, Vodder made his mark in the 1960s, when modern design had gained wide acceptance, particularly in the business world. Accordingly, many of Vodder's chairs are quiet in form — projecting an air of sturdiness and strength, rather than avant-garde styling.

Vodder’s aesthetic flair was very pronounced in his vintage cabinets and storage piecessideboards, bookcases, credenzas and buffets. In such pieces, Vodder liked to play with asymmetry. His bookcases often have a seemingly random array of variously sized shelves and nooks. A typical Vodder sideboard might have four sections, each different in purpose and look: an open stack of vertical shelves, and other cupboards covered with sliding panels in contrasting colored laminates and wood veneers.

As you will see from the works on 1stDibs, Arne Vodder had a sense of what kind of design was appropriate for which space: sobriety in the boardroom; playfulness at home.