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  • Issue 48

Delayed Gratification

In partnership with Fritz Hansen, Kinfolk unearths the long history of a new classic.
Words by George Upton. Photograph by Ville Varumo.

Design schools are much more than just a place to learn a trade. For young designers, particularly those coming of age at times of great change, they are often the site of bold innovations that will go on to define a new generation’s aesthetic tastes. 

For Danish designer Poul Kjærholm, the three years he spent at the School of Arts and Crafts in Copenhagen were transformative. By the end of 1952—the year he graduated—he had already designed four pieces that marked him out as one of Denmark’s most important mid-century designers, despite being only in his early 20s. One of these—the PK4 chair—has recently been reissued by the Danish design house Fritz Hansen.

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This story is from Kinfolk Issue Forty-Eight

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