Isokon
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Lawn Road flats
Isokon’s key nanna was the Lawn Road Flats in Hampstead, sometimes called the Isokon building, which opened on 9 July 1934. Intended to be the last word in contemporary modernist living, the block of flats were aimed at the market of new young professionals of the 1930s and contained 22 single flats, four double flats, three studio flats, staff quarters, kitchens and a large garage. In 1937 a club, the Isobar, was added to the complex.
The flats and particularly the bar became famous as a centre for intellectual life in North London, famous residents included Agatha Christie, and regulars at the Isobar included Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth and Ben Nicholson.
Bauhaus in London
In 1935, Walter Gropius, the former head of the Bauhaus, became Controller of Design for Isokon. He arrived in England on 18 October 1934 and lived in one of the Lawn Road Flats until March 1937, when he and his wife left for USA. A month before he left for the USA, Gropius recommended Marcel Breuer, a former colleague at the Bauhaus, as his replacement for Controller of Design. The furniture Breuer designed whilst at Isokon are highly influential pieces of the modernist movement, and included chairs, tables and the Long Chair.
Lszl Moholy-Nagy, another former Bauhaus teacher, also became involved with Isokon when he arrived in Britain from Germany in May 1935 and designed promotional material, including sales leaflets, showcards and the logo of Isokon firm itself, which was an outline of curved plywood chair.
Isokon revival
Jack Pritchard revived Isokon Furniture Company in 1963. However changes in the manufacture of plywood meant a redesign of some of the key pieces in the Isokon portfolio, for which Pritchard hired Ernest Race. In 1968, Pritchard licensed John Alan Designs to produce the Long Chair, Nesting Tables and the Penguin Donkey 2 which the company did until 1980.
Jack and Molly retired to their home designed by Jack’s daughter Jennifer Jones and her husband Colin in 1966. The modern house called Isokon, turns heads to this day in Blythburgh, Suffolk.
In 1982, Chris McCourt of Windmill Furniture took over the license to manufacture Isokon pieces. Since 1999, this furniture has been sold through the retail arm of Windmill, Isokon Plus in Chiswick, London.
Isokon furnitur , oak wood cabinets .
Isokon Stool (designer unknown, 1933 , mosquito net bed .
Isokon Book Units (designed by Wells Coates, 1933)
Desk made from Isokon Book Units (designed by Wells Coates, 1933)
Aluminium Waste Paper Basket (designed by Walter Gropius, 1935)
Side Table GT2 (designed by Walter Gropius, 1936)
Isokon Nesting Tables (designed by Marcel Breuer, 1936)
Isokon Dining Table (designed by Marcel Breuer, 1936)
Isokon Stacking Chairs (designed by Marcel Breuer, 1936)
Isokon Long Chair (designed by Marcel Breuer, 1935-6)
The Pocket Bottleship (designed by Egon Riss, 1939)
The Pocket Bottleship Mark 2 (designed by Ernest Race, 1963)
The Penguin Donkey (designer by Egon Riss, 1939)
The Penguin Donkey Mark 2 (designed by Ernest Race, 1963)
References
Grieve, Alastair. 2004. Isokon: For Ease, For Ever. London: Isokon Plus. ISBN 0-9548676-0-2.
External links
Jack Pritchard The Pritchard Papers, UEA Norwich
John Craven Pritchard (Jack) Archives Hub
Isokon at Blythburgh Alan Mackley
Isokon Designers Isokon Plus
Categories: Architecture firms of the United Kingdom | Companies based in London | Companies established in 1929 | Modernist architecture in the United Kingdom