Object: Secessionist armchairs for a dining room (3 pieces)
Design: Joseph Maria Olbrich (Vienna, 1901)
Client: Hermann Bahr
Execution: Karl/Carl Bamberger (Vienna, 1901)
Dimensions in cm (H x W x D x SH): 93.5 x 42.5 x 46.5 x 44
Material: Solid cherry, brass
Condition: Museum quality / original
Last provenance: Otto Schenk
Exhibition: Venice Biennale, 1984 (1 example, loan from Otto Schenk)
Additional information:
The three armchairs presented here come from the dining room furnishings of the villa of the writer and cultural theorist Hermann Bahr at Winzenzstraße 22 in 1130 Vienna and were manufactured in 1900/1901 by the Viennese furniture manufactory Carl (Karl) Bamberger, based on a design by Joseph Maria Olbrich. The original set, created for the interior, comprised at least five (and at most eight) pieces. The surviving pieces are among the rare furniture from Olbrich's Viennese period and represent an important document of early Viennese Modernism.
Joseph Maria Olbrich (1867–1908) is one of the most outstanding and influential founding figures of the Vienna Secession and embodies the avant-garde awakening of Viennese Modernism around 1900 like few others. Together with Gustav Klimt, Josef Hoffmann, and Koloman Moser, he was one of the key initiators of the association in 1897 and occupied a pivotal position within it, not only helping to shape its artistic program but also giving it a distinctive architectural form. with the Secession Building, erected in 1898, Olbrich created one of the earliest and most compelling manifestos of modern architecture. In this building, the aspiration for a new, radically contemporary formal language is condensed into an iconic unity of idea, space, and ornament. Olbrich's designs thus mark the beginning of a development toward a clear, constructively conceived, and minimalist aesthetic that became a guiding principle for the Viennese avant-garde and had an impact far beyond Vienna. His Viennese period, however, remained exceptionally short: as early as 1899/1900, he accepted a position in Darmstadt, where he decisively shaped the artists' colony on the Mathildenhöhe as its leading architect. This early departure lends his Viennese oeuvre a particular exclusivity—the few furniture designs he created during this time are among the rarest and most significant material testimonies to his direct work at the heart of Viennese Modernism.
The furniture was crafted in solid cherry wood by the Viennese manufactory Carl (Karl) Bamberger, which around 1900 was one of the leading producers of high-quality interior furnishings and regularly collaborated with leading architects and designers of the time.
The pieces were executed in solid cherry wood by the Viennese manufacturer Carl (Karl) Bamberger, which around 1900 was one of the most important producers of high-quality interior furnishings and regularly collaborated with leading architects and designers of the era.
The furniture was commissioned by the writer Hermann Bahr (1863–1934), one of the most influential figures in Vienna's literary and cultural scene around 1900—a key figure of modernism. Bahr worked as a theorist and writer, cultural translator, spokesperson for Young Vienna, advisor to the Secession, and modernizer of theatrical discourse. He was extremely closely associated with the Vienna Secession and served as a literary advisor to Ver Sacrum, the journal published by Austria's most important artists' association. Ver Sacrum is considered the movement's central publication and significantly contributed to the dissemination of its artistic and theoretical positions.
Between 1900 and 1912, Bahr's Viennese villa became a significant meeting place for the cultural avant-garde. Guests included Arthur Schnitzler, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Richard Beer-Hofmann, Gustav Klimt, Otto Wagner, Richard Strauss, and Gustav Mahler. In this environment of intense artistic exchange, questions of modern literature, music, architecture, and the visual arts were discussed. It is therefore highly probable that numerous prominent figures of Viennese Modernism—along with many other guests—actually sat in these armchairs.
Bahr later moved to Salzburg (to the piano nobile of Arenberg Castle), demonstrably taking the furnishings of his Viennese villa with him. A later stay in Munich (Barerstraße 50) is also documented, making it very likely that furniture from the original Villa Bahr furnishings, including these armchairs, accompanied Bahr on these occasions.
The more recent provenance leads to Otto Schenk, a significant figure in 20th-century Austrian theater and cultural life. Schenk worked internationally as a director, actor, and artistic director, and was also a dedicated collector of Viennese Modernist art and design. His collection included numerous high-quality objects from the Vienna Secession and contributed significantly to strengthening interest in this era in the later 20th century.
One of the three armchairs offered here—the one marked on the underside—was presented at the 1984 Venice Biennale as part of the exhibition "Le arti a Vienna – Dalla secessione alla caduta dell’impero Asburgico," with Otto Schenk as the lender. Since its founding in 1895, the Venice Biennale has been one of the most important international exhibition institutions for art and architecture and remains one of the most significant platforms for the presentation and reception of important art historical positions. Two original tickets from the 1984 Biennale exhibition are included with this armchair and further underscore its documented exhibition history.
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