Otto Schulz was born in 1882 in Germany and died in 1970 in Gothenburg. He trained as an interior architect at the Technical School in Charlottenburg from 1900–1907. During the years 1904 – 1907, while still studying, he simultaneously worked with the Swedish-born architect Professor Alfred Grenander. In 1907, after receiving a diploma from the Kunstgewerbe Museum in Berlin, Schulz moved to Sweden and Gothenburg. After a period as an employee, in 1910, he started his own business as an interior architect specializing in ship interiors.
In 1917, Schulz was commissioned to design the new interiors at Bräutigams Konditori on Östra Hamngatan in Gothenburg. This became an important assignment and certainly gave a boost to his career. In 1920, the firm Boet was founded in partnership with Adolf Nordenberg in Gothenburg. Boet was a furniture and interior design company located at the intersection of Kungsportsavenyn and Kristinelundsgatan. The store displayed full-scale interior design content for inspiration, advice and sales. They also had other producers' items and objects in the range in the showrooms.
Otto Schulz applied for patents for techniques that were used on Boet furniture and interior details: Bosaik (a mosaic coating that was resistant to moisture), Botarsia (a pattern technique using brass pins on wood) and Bopoint (brass nails placed in decoration pattern on the fabric, leather or artificial leather).
Watercolour showing the auction’s cabinet in green velvet and geometric decoration with pearl nails.
From 1926, Nordenberg left out the partnership, and Schulz became the sole owner of Boet. Schulz also published the magazine Boet between the years 1928-1938. The magazine has been, and still is today, an essential source of knowledge. In addition to showing Boet's interiors, the focus was equally on showing the interiors of other contemporary furniture architects, both Swedish and international. According to the preface in the first publication in 1928, the aim was:
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Boet magazine intends to meet the current need for discussion, for information regarding the artistic and practical design of the home.
Otto Schulz, a pair of easy chairs, Boet, Gothenburg 1930s. Estimate 50 000 – 75 000 SEK.
Otto Schulz was an architect who went his way and designed furniture that is often unparalleled among contemporary colleagues. His collective impressions and experiences are manifested in the furniture he designed. So far, Schulz’s design is relatively unknown internationally compared to, for example, his Swedish colleagues Axel Einar Hjorth’s and Josef Frank’s.
Browse & bid on a beautiful selection of Otto Schulz at Modern Art + Design.
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