Eero Aarnio the globe chair
The popularity of plastics in Finnish furniture design lasted from the mid 1960s to the mid 1970s and Eero Aarnio (1932-) was at the forefront of the trend. His premier examples were the playful shape of his fiberglass "Pallo" (Globe) chair and his "Pastille" chair, an indoor/outdoor, Pop take on the rocking chair, which won an American Industrial Design award in 1968.
Aarnio was born in Helsinki and studied at the Institute of Industrial Arts
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that, "design means constant renewal, realignment and growth." In following with this sentiment, Aarnio began using polyurethane foam in the 1970's to create works like the "Pony" chair (1970) which have an almost animated character to them. In a recent article in The New York Times Aarnio reasserted the contemporary merits of plastic, stating that "Today's generation is born in the midst of plastic. Their first night is spent in a plastic bed in the hospital."
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