
"Sargasso" Plate in Glass by Kaj Franck, 1960s
View Similar Items
"Sargasso" Plate in Glass by Kaj Franck, 1960s
About the Item
- Creator:Kaj Franck (Designer),Nuutajärvi Notsjõ (Manufacturer)
- Dimensions:Height: 1.25 in (3.18 cm)Diameter: 14 in (35.56 cm)
- Style:Modern (In the Style Of)
- Materials and Techniques:
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:1960s
- Condition:
- Seller Location:New York, NY
- Reference Number:Seller: SG14981stDibs: LU877114719552
Kaj Franck
Kaj Gabriel Franck was a leading figure in 20th-century Finnish design, specializing in ceramics and glass. As the creative director of Arabia Ceramics, now part of Iittala, he, along with fellow Finns Timo Sarpaneva and Tapio Wirkkala, helped popularize the bright, warm and curvy aesthetic of Scandinavian modernism. Design Forum Finland’s Kaj Franck Design Prize, established in 1992 and awarded each year around his birthday, is among the country’s most prestigious honors for designers.
Franck was born in 1911 in the city of Vyborg, which now belongs to Russia, but was then part of the Grand Duchy of Finland. He studied furniture design at the Central School of Industrial Design in Helsinki, and after graduating in 1932, worked as a catalogue illustrator for the Riihimäki glassworks, exploring interior and textile design on the side.
Having served in the Finnish armed forces during World War II, Franck joined Arabia in 1945 as their head of design. He remained with the company for many years, steering its line of tableware in a dynamic new direction. Franck professed an aversion to superfluous ornament. His ceramic designs were nevertheless complex and eye-catching, animated with playful, geometric forms. One of his most famous creations for Arabia was the Origami dish from the early 1960s, a glossy all-white serving piece resembling a subtly folded piece of paper with four shallow sections for holding food.
Although his Arabia ceramics became household staples for consumers in Scandinavia and beyond, Franck is better known among collectors for his glass designs, particularly those he created for Iittala starting in the late 1940s. In a 1947 Iittala-sponsored glass competition, Franck shared the top prize with Tapio Wirkkala. In 1950, he designed the company’s iconic Kartio series of pressed-glass pitchers and glasses, which came in different colors that consumers could “mix and match” rather than having to buy a homogeneous set. In 1977, Franck redesigned the series, renamed Teemaa.
Franck’s designs for Iittala embodied the Finnish concept of pelkistetty, which literally means “reduced” and in the design world refers to the pared-down, minimal qualities of modernism. This principle, evidenced in objects like his elegant, unfussy sets of jewel-toned drinking glasses from the 1960s, informed Franck’s view of the manufacturing process as well. Critical of mass production and consumerism, he was one of the country’s first professionals in his field to advocate recycling. He became known as the “conscience of Finnish design,” a role he embraced as a professor and later artistic director at the University of Art and Design in Helsinki.
In honor of Franck’s 100th birthday, in 2011, Iittala reissued Kartio glasses, Teema tableware and Purnukka jars, among other of his designs that retain their contemporary feel decades after their creation.
Find vintage Kaj Franck glass, vases and other furniture and decor on 1stDibs.

More From This Seller
View AllVintage 1980s American Modern Side Chairs
Plywood
2010s American Sofas
Foam
2010s American Chandeliers and Pendants
Cowhide
Vintage 1970s Italian Table Lamps
Metal
Early 2000s Danish Modern Armchairs
Blown Glass
Mid-20th Century German Modern Screens and Room Dividers
Canvas, Plywood
You May Also Like
Late 20th Century Finnish Scandinavian Modern Glass
Glass, Blown Glass, Art Glass
Vintage 1960s Finnish Scandinavian Modern Glass
Art Glass, Blown Glass
Vintage 1960s Finnish Post-Modern Ashtrays
Art Glass
Vintage 1960s Mid-Century Modern Platters and Serveware
Bamboo, Rattan
Vintage 1960s Finnish Mid-Century Modern Barware
Art Glass
Mid-20th Century Finnish Mid-Century Modern Pitchers
Glass, Art Glass
Recently Viewed
View AllRead More
The Weird Science of Rogan Gregory’s Hypnotic Designs
Using stone, wood and bronze, the wildly inventive sculptor creates an entirely new species of functional art object.
Learn Why Designer Maarten Baas Set This Charles Rennie Mackintosh Chair on Fire
What happens when you do something to a piece of furniture that you shouldn’t? It becomes an entirely new object.