Frans Schrofer

Last updated
Frans Schrofer
Franschroferb&w.jpg
Schrofer, 2012
Born (1956-08-15) August 15, 1956 (age 64)
NationalityDutch
Alma mater Design Academy Eindhoven
Occupation Furniture Designer
Product designer
Years active1984–present
Known forScudo chair (for Young International)
Formi (for Leolux)
Prometheus and OlympiQ firespace (for Safretti)
StyleSculptural, practical
Website www.studioschrofer.com

Frans Schrofer (born 15 August 1956) is a Dutch furniture designer and industrial designer based in The Hague, Netherlands. He received a technical education in Leiden and then studied at the Design Academy Eindhoven, graduating in 1983 and founding his own design studio, Studio Schrofer, in 1984. He is known for a sculptural approach to furniture design, conscious use of materials, practicality, ergonomics, technical knowledge and for pioneering a modern, design-led approach to garden furniture styles. [1]

Contents

Education and early career

Schrofer's early education included metalwork, auto mechanics, electro-mechanics and mechanical engineering. Supplementing his formal education, from the age of 12, Schrofer was mentored by the sculptor, Frans de Wit. During this time the young Schrofer acted as de Wit's artistic assistant, developing an awareness of sculptural style in the process. "Frans de Wit taught me to focus on form, materials and emotions," Schrofer said in an interview in 1995. After his technical education in Leiden, he went on to study at the Design Academy Eindhoven, graduating in 1983. After graduation, Schrofer's first job was as a packaging designer [2] with Stadium Design in Hillegom. It is during this time that he learned the importance of emotive shape, color association, hand-feel textures and consumer product testing.

In 1984 Schrofer set up his own design studio in The Hague, Netherlands. Studio Schrofer received its first commission from the Dutch firm, Young International, [2] an association that would last for several, productive years and bring Schrofer widespread recognition as a rising young talent in the Netherlands. By 2000, Schrofer designs in lighting, office furniture, and indoor and outdoor furniture were being sold internationally. As of 2012, Studio Schrofer designed products sell in 126 countries.

Furniture design

Formi chair FormiSchrofer.jpg
Formi chair

As well as sculptural quality, [3] Schrofer's furniture designs are known for their practicality, conscious use of materials and ergonomic principles.

One of his most well known early designs is the Scudo chair (for Young International). [4] Inspired by slow relaxed movement and shape of turtle ('scudo' means 'shield' in Italian), the reclining armchair was one of the most commercially successful for the manufacturer. Schrofer explored bending, stretching, pulling materials and forms in self-expressive shapes and multi-functionality for Scudo. The paws of Scudo use natural materials, like wood, and the headrest is magnetically attached.

The Formi chair, first launched in 2002 for Leolux, is another key design of Schrofer's. It is based on the structure of a working bee and a few years later, for Formi Phase II, Schrofer further innovated the design to incorporate a rotary continuous passive motion (RCPM) industrial seating mechanism (used for spinal rotation).

Schrofer has designed for Dutch furniture manufacturers such as Leolux, [5] Metaform, Harvink, Hartman Outdoor Products and Bree's New World, [2] as well as international brands such as:

Garden furniture design

In 1998, Schrofer approached the Dutch-managed, Chinese-based trade house, Xindao, and English teak garden firm, Lister Teak 1874 (part of the Sun Wood Group), with designs for mixed material garden furniture collections. Schrofer foresaw that Asia could provide inexpensive labour and a range of raw materials suitable for contemporary designs – designs that matched architecture and lifestyles with dissolved borders between inside and outside, home and work. [6] He was successful: five collections designed by Schrofer for those manufacturers were, in 2000, simultaneously introduced at SPOGA, the annual sport and garden trade fair held in Cologne, Germany. The collections included the Garden Signature Collection (by Frans Schrofer for Xindao) and the Cannes Collection of teak slats with satinised stainless steel from Sun Wood Group. Immediate international placements catapulted Schrofer's reputation in garden furniture design.

Lighting and other works

Early on in his career, Schrofer's created several lighting designs (for Dutch firm, Scopelight, and Indoor of Amsterdam) including the Plume (1990), [4] a lamp whose metal components were so intricate that the precision engineering skills of instrument makers had to be used for manufacture. In 2010, he returned to lighting design to work with Austrian firm, XAL. For them, he created two designs:

Demonstrating his strong technical understanding, Schrofer has also designed several, eco-friendly firespaces for Dutch firm, Safretti (a firespace being a bio-ethynol fuelled hearth that doesn’t require a flu or chimney). The OlympiQ incorporates a high efficiency, wood burning (Philips) technology to create a multifunctional - fireplace and barbecue - design. A bio-ethanol fuel reservoir provides clean burning flames and, for optimum wood burning and minimal residue, a thermally conductive Peltier-element transforms the heat to energy that recharges the batteries to the air flow motor.

In 2011, Schrofer approached the historic Dutch gin manufacturer, van Kleef, with an idea to innovate the product's packaging, suitable for use as a gift representing the city of The Hague. Using a traditional ceramic manufacturing technique, Schrofer designed two distinctively shaped bottles to differentiate the old gin (oude) from the young (jonge) distilling process, together with matching shot glasses.

Schrofer has also designed glassware, tables, storage cabinets and a chess set. [7]

Awards and honours

Caruzzo chair, Red Dot Award Winner Caruzzo red dot.jpg
Caruzzo chair, Red Dot Award Winner

Teaching

Schrofer is committed to accelerating the connections and commitments between design manufacturers and design education institutions, teaching that design is an inter-connected chain of disciplines. [5]

From 1987-2002 Schrofer taught at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague instructing on three-dimensional packaging and he served on the advisory committee for the Industrial Product Development Department of The Hague University from 2000-2005. Schrofer has also consulted at Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences' Master's Program for Industrial Design from 2007-2010. Schrofer has been active in the enforcement of stricter international intellectual property laws, as relating to design, and has lectured on this at the International Furniture Fair (CIFF) in Guangzhou, China in 2009 and 2010. Still a keen advocate for developing local talent, in 2012 Schrofer lectured for the Dutch organisation, Cultuur Ondernemen, which seeks to encourage entrepreneurship amongst artists and cultural creatives.

Family background

Schrofer was raised in Voorschoten, Netherlands, into a family of artists. Frans' father, Willem Schrofer, was a teacher at the Royal Academy of Art and the founder of the Nieuwe Haagse School movement. His mother, Hannie Bal, was a student at the Academy and later a member of the Verve group. His uncle, Jan Schrofer, was the founder of the furniture factory, The Circle (later to become the market leader, Ahrend), in Zwanenberg, Netherlands and was renowned for his collaboration with Friso Kramer in the development of the Revolt chair. [2] Frans' half brother, Juriaan Schrofer, was a renowned graphic designer and the Director of the Art Academy in Arnhem. Juriaan's son, Gilian Schrofer, established both Concrete, an architecture agency in Amsterdam, and the Schrofer Academie, the only accredited Interior Design Masters program in Europe. Schrofer's cousin, Janwillem, was the Director of the Rijks Academy from 1983-2010.

Personal life

Citroen SM headlights Citroen SM Mulhouse FRA 001.JPG
Citroën SM headlights

Schrofer lives in The Hague, Netherlands. He is married to Sonia Sin and has two daughters. Schrofer owns a Citroën SM Maserati and is an auto racing enthusiast. According to Schrofer, "Car designers have always been trend setters ... they use more and more expressive, organic forms. Look, for instance, at the integration of the headlights in the hood. I believe that furniture design will follow this curvy trend." [3]

See also

Related Research Articles

Michael Graves American architect and designer of consumer products

Michael Graves was a noted American architect and designer of consumer products. As well as principal of Michael Graves and Associates and Michael Graves Design Group, he was of a member of The New York Five and the Memphis Group – and professor of architecture at Princeton University for nearly forty years. Following his own partial paralysis in 2003, Graves became an internationally recognized advocate of health care design.

Daniel Marot

Daniel Marot or Daniel Marot the Elder (1661–1752) was a french-born dutch architect, furniture designer and engraver at the forefront of the classicizing Late Baroque "Louis XIV" style. He worked for a long time in England and the Dutch Republic, where he was naturalised in 1709.

Piet Zwart

Piet Zwart was a Dutch photographer, typographer, and industrial designer.

Design Academy Eindhoven

Design Academy Eindhoven is an interdisciplinary educational institute for art, architecture and design in Eindhoven, Netherlands. The work of its faculty and alumni have brought it international recognition.

Russel Wright American industrial designer

Russel Wright was an American Industrial designer. His best-selling ceramic dinnerware was credited with encouraging the general public to enjoy creative modern design at table. With his many other ranges of furniture, accessories and textiles, he largely transformed the atmosphere of the mid-century American home.

Katie Walker is a British furniture designer well known for combining simple components in her work. Her designs combine the function of the object with a sculptural interpretation of its structure. She works with craft and volume manufacturers and produces specific one-off commissions from a variety of materials.

Richard Hutten

Richard G. J. Hutten is a Dutch designer, working on diverse projects such as furniture, product, interior, and exhibition design.

Robin Day (designer)

Robin Day, OBE, RDI, FCSD was one of the most significant British furniture designers of the 20th century, enjoying a long career spanning seven decades. An accomplished industrial and interior designer, he was also active in the fields of graphics and exhibitions.

Schmidt Hammer Lassen

Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects (SHL) is an international architectural firm founded by a group of Danish architects in 1986 in Aarhus, Denmark. It currently has three offices in Copenhagen and Aarhus in Denmark, and Shanghai, China.

Danish modern

Danish modern is a style of minimalist furniture and housewares from Denmark associated with the Danish design movement. In the 1920s, Kaare Klint embraced the principles of Bauhaus modernism in furniture design, creating clean, pure lines based on an understanding of classical furniture craftsmanship coupled with careful research into materials, proportions and the requirements of the human body. With designers such as Arne Jacobsen and Hans Wegner and associated cabinetmakers, Danish furniture thrived from the 1940s to the 1960s. Adopting mass-production techniques and concentrating on form rather than just function, Finn Juhl contributed to the style's success. Danish housewares adopting a similar minimalist design such as cutlery and trays of teak and stainless steel and dinnerware such as those produced in Denmark for Dansk in its early years, expanded the Danish modern aesthetic beyond furniture.

W. H. Gispen

Willem Hendrik Gispen was a Dutch industrial designer, best known for his Giso lamps and serially produced functionalist steel-tube furniture.

Dutch Design

Dutch Design is a term used to denote an informal artistic school of design in the Netherlands, particularly product design. More specifically, the term refers to the design esthetic common to designers in the Netherlands.

Hendrik Wouda

Hendrik Wouda Dutch architect and furniture designer. He designed furniture, lighting and interiors for homes, offices, ships and exhibitions. His work is characterized by a strongly marked simplicity, a cubic joining together of volumes, well-balanced spatial effects and a practical division of the floor-plan. He also practiced independently as an architect.

Grete Jalk

Grete Juel Jalk (1920–2006) was a Danish furniture designer. From the 1960s, she did much to enhance Denmark's reputation for modern furniture design with her clear, comfortable lines. She also edited the Danish magazine Mobilia and compiled a four-volume work on Danish furniture.

Johanna Anna Maria "Hannie" Bal was a Dutch painter and part of the Verve movement.

Olav Haug

Olav Haug was a Norwegian furniture designer and master craftsman whose furniture designs demonstrated a deep understanding of woodwork and quality craftsmanship. His designs won him awards and production orders from numerous governmental and publics institutions, yet he remains a relatively unknown figure in the Norwegian mid-century design landscape.

Bert Nienhuis

Lambertus (Bert) Nienhuis was a Dutch ceramist, designer and jewelry designer.

Karel Sluijterman

Theodorus Karel Lodewijk Sluijterman, was a Dutch architect, furniture designer, interior designer, illustrator, ceramist, book binding designer and professor.

Ruud-Jan Kokke

Ruud-Jan Kokke is a Dutch designer who started his career in the mid-eighties and became known for his furniture, inventive objects, interiors and designs for public space. He has received numerous nominations and awards. He is married to the visual artist and jewellery designer Petra Hartman.

Karel de Bazel

Karel Petrus Cornelis de Bazel was a modern Dutch architect, engraver, draftsman, furniture designer, carpet designer, glass artist and bookbinding designer. He was the teacher of Adriaan Frederik van der Weij and the first chairman of the Bond van Nederlandse Architecten, beginning in 1909.

References

  1. 'Eindelijk behoorlijk tuinmeubilair', The Volkskrant Magazine, 14 July 2001, p46
  2. 1 2 3 4 'De vloeiende vormen van Frans Schrofer' by Cor Hospes, Algemeen Dagblad, B1, 1 June 1996
  3. 1 2 'Voluptuous and naughty: The wavy furniture of Frans Schrofer' by Marjan Ippel, Vivenda, November 1995, pp19-25
  4. 1 2 'Frans Schrofer: Produktief ontwerper', Woonbeeld, No. 3, 1991, pp59-61
  5. 1 2 'Ästhetik Trifft Erfindergeist', MöbelMarkt, September 2012
  6. 'Een buitenkamer is de tuin geworden: Compleet met meubels die binnen niet zouden misstaan', by Harmen van Dijk, Trouw, 10 April 2004
  7. 'A lifestyle of creativity: What's so great about Dutch design?', Evening Standard, 12 December 1997, pp8-9
  8. "Caruzzo bekroond met Red Dot Award”, Chapeau Magazine, 31 March 2015

www.studioschrofer.com