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The Bofinger Chairs in the Rams‘ Garden

Gerrit Terstiege

The Bofinger quartet in the Rams garden has aged gracefully – perfectly in keeping with the Wabi-Sabi principle valued by Dieter Rams.
© Cassandra Peters / rams foundation
Four blue Bofinger Chairs have been a feature of the Rams’ garden since 1971. They perform an important supporting role there, appearing in numerous photographs in books and press articles, and of course in Gary Hustwit’s film, released in 2018, in which Dieter Rams is seen in one scene sitting at the garden table, talking with his wife Ingeborg or pruning a small bonsai tree. The chairs not only serve an important seating function, as an ensemble in the garden they also create a colour counterpoint to the natural, seasonally changing hues of the plants and trees. Were one to compare the rich, shining blue hue of an early Bofinger Chair, also known as BA 1171, which is carefully preserved under ideal conditions in the Vitra Design Museum’s collection, with those in the Rams garden, one might well conclude that the latter have become more attractive with the passing years. The weathered, sun-bleached blue hue of this quartet has taken on a natural, understated quality — maybe even reminiscent of Rilke’s famous poem ‘Blue Hydrangea’, whose leaves the poet described as ‘dry, dull and rough’. A wonderful tone that further attests to the value of using and preserving objects for the long term. For the patina that bears the marks of life, and those of sun, wind, and weather, only emerges after many years. This poses a challenge for today’s designers: to select materials that will last for decades, rather than those that break easily and subsequently render an object unusable. Today, it is more important than ever to seek long product lifecycles right from the design phase and to make greater use of ‘patina-capable’ materials — a term promoted by German designer Günter Horntrich. Dieter Rams led by example, in that many of the products he designed, whether for Braun, Vitsœ, or FSB, are still in use decades later and continue to delight their users worldwide.
The Bofinger chair on the cover of form 34. © Verlag form
The BA 1171 from the VDM collection. © Vitra Design Museum, photo: Andreas Sütterlin

The Bofinger Chair, graphically presented by Karl Oskar Blase on the cover of form 34 in the summer of 1966, was a much-acclaimed innovation in the mid-to-late 1960s and is still relevant to design history to this day, having been the first chair to be made entirely of plastic. It has thus become the basis for numerous Monobloc variants, most of which are, however, unremarkable from an aesthetic perspective. The Bofinger Chair is less elegant and sculptural than the Panton Chair. Its manufacturing procedure is clearly apparent too. Why? The form was the outcome of meeting specific requirements: stackability and load-bearing capacity — along with what was probably the only sensible manufacturing method at the time. In the Atlas of Furniture Design, Mathias Remmele describes the term ‘prepreg’, a process used in the Bofinger Chair, as follows: ‘This involved the use of prefabricated glass fibre mats impregnated with through-dyed polyester. These were formed in a forged steel mould by employing a pressure of over 300 tonnes at a temperature of approximately 145 degrees Celsius. After the pressing process, which took just five to ten minutes, all that remained was to sand down the edges of the chair.’ The name of its designer has, sadly, fallen into obscurity today, for unlike the Panton Chair, it was not a Mr Bofinger who designed it, but an architect from Karlsruhe named Helmut Bätzner (1928–2010). Bofinger, however, was the name of the company that helped bring the first Monobloc to production and it distributed it for many years. Interestingly, the Bofinger Chair is closely linked to the Badisches Staatstheater, one of Helmut Bätzner’s renowned architectural projects. The architect wanted to design a flexible seating solution specifically for this cultural building, and began developing a lightweight and affordable stackable chair around 1964–1965. The rest is history. While the BA 1171 was a common sight in many cafés, hospitals and canteens, particularly in the 1970s, it seemed somewhat out of place in the high-culture setting of the state theatre. In fact, it was never used there, according to Remmele. Production began in April 1968 and was not set to end until 1984. However, other, even cheaper plastics that were less labour-intensive to process came into fashion. Its fate was therefore sealed. Yet, lo and behold: the newspaper and magazine articles referring to Dieter Rams, as well as the camera pans in film reports, have resulted in the blue version becoming particularly sought-after among Braun collectors. And so, even today, numerous examples are still cared for and are highly prized by their owners. Whatever the reasons may be, prudent long-term use, extending over decades, is better than any form of overhasty recycling.

Since Dieter and Ingeborg Rams moved into their house in 1971, four Bofinger chairs have been an integral part of the thoughtfully designed garden.
A wintry atmosphere: Since Dieter and Ingeborg Rams moved into their house in 1971, four Bofinger chairs have been an integral part of the thoughtfully designed garden. © Klaus Klemp / rams foundation

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