Six Fibre Cement Planters, By Willy Gühl, Eternit Ag, France, Circa 1971 flag

Six Fibre Cement Planters, By Willy Gühl, Eternit Ag, France, Circa 1971
Six Fibre Cement Planters, By Willy Gühl, Eternit Ag, France, Circa 1971-photo-2
Six Fibre Cement Planters, By Willy Gühl, Eternit Ag, France, Circa 1971-photo-3
Six Fibre Cement Planters, By Willy Gühl, Eternit Ag, France, Circa 1971-photo-4
Six Fibre Cement Planters, By Willy Gühl, Eternit Ag, France, Circa 1971-photo-1

Object description :

"Six Fibre Cement Planters, By Willy Gühl, Eternit Ag, France, Circa 1971"
Six planters or cache-pots in the form of cauldrons, « Marmite » model. Tripod base. Very fine natural patina.

Biography
Willy Gühl, Suisse (1915-2004)
Decades prior to the mass popularity of neo-industrial cement floors and furniture taking shape, there was Willy Guhl. The Swiss creative is considered one of the first “industrial” designers in his home country. He pioneered a rugged, organic style of modern furniture and decor — stylish planters, shapely seating and lots more — that remains widely coveted by many today.
Guhl was born in 1915 in Stein am Rhein and worked as a carpenter before beginning studies at the Zurich School of Applied Arts (known today as the Zurich University of the Arts), where he would go on to teach for nearly 40 years.
While Guhl is well-known for his range of provocative garden elements as well as his patio and outdoor furniture, today’s legion of mid-century modern enthusiasts are likely familiar with the designer’s iconic Loop chair (introduced in 1954). For this sculptural seat and other furnishings, Guhl tended toward industrial materials, which he bent and shaped into organic forms for a striking juxtaposition. Much of his work is crafted from either concrete or Eternit, a mixture of cement and asbestos developed by the Belgian company Etex, which, in the 1950s, commissioned Guhl and his students at the School of Applied Arts to conceive planters in the material. The resulting vessels — some hourglass-shaped, some in the form of handkerchiefs, all suitable for indoors or exteriors — remain some of Guhl’s most collectible pieces.
Guhl’s affiliation with the Swiss “neo-functional” movement centered on the idea of simplifying design without sacrificing form. According to Guhl, his mission was “achieving the most with the minimum of effort.”
In addition to his work as a designer, Guhl left his mark on subsequent creatives through his 39-year tenure at his alma mater, where he was instructor to the likes of Robert Haussmann, Kurt Thut and Bruno Rey. Modern-day shoppers at IKEA owe Guhl a debt of gratitude too. He was an early advocate of flat-pack furniture, championing its ability to make good design more widely accessible.
At its core, though, Guhl’s work was inherently human-centric: “At the center of my efforts, I put people and their living requirements,” he once said. “My products must be useful to people.” Guhl died in 2004 at the age of 89.
To know more, please click on this link (only in French):


History
Eternit France is a French industrial company that was the leading producer of asbestos cement, ahead of Saint-Gobain, until asbestos was banned in 1997, and has since been replaced by fiber cement. Eternit France is now owned by the Belgian Etex group, which took over from Eternit Belgium in 1995.
To find out more, please click on this link:
 
Price: 3 800 €
Artist: Willy Gühl Eternit Ag
Period: 20th century
Style: Other Style
Condition: Good condition

Material: Other
Width: 53 cm
Diameter: 43 cm
Height: 45 cm

Reference: 1252083
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Galerie Canavèse
Decorative Arts of the eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth Centuries
Six Fibre Cement Planters, By Willy Gühl, Eternit Ag, France, Circa 1971
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