a Swedish Modern armchair, Boet, Gothenburg, 1930-40s.
Lacquered oak, seat and back upholstered in white textile with deep-buttoned details, seat height 42 cm, height 75 cm.
Reupholstered, minor wear.
Depicted in Boet: månadsskrift för hemkultur, hantverk och konstindustri, Boet, Göteborg, 1938, p. 46.
Otto Schulz (1882-1970) was a German-born designer and architect who spent the majority of his life working in Gothenburg. In 1920, Schulz founded the company Boet together with Adolf Nordenberg, which became a highly influential interior and furniture manufacturer. Schulz's daring aesthetics have a multifaceted character that has contributed to important elements in both the Swedish Grace and Swedish Modern concepts. Schulz also published the magazine Boet, which, along with the store and business, helped to cement his role as central in interior design contexts. Some of Schulz's characteristics included developing techniques for which he took out patents, such as Bopoint, Bosaik, and Botarsia, all of which contributed to the furniture's distinctive aesthetics and quality.
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