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Company type | Private |
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Industry | Furniture, houseware |
Founded | 1971 |
Founder | Alan Heller |
Headquarters | , United States |
Website | hellerinc |
Heller is an American company founded in 1971 that makes and sells indoor/outdoor furniture and accessories. It is headquartered in Westport, Connecticut, United States. Its founder, Alan Heller, invited well-known architects and designers including Mario Bellini, Frank Gehry, and Lella and Massimo Vignelli to create products for the company.
Examples of its furniture and houseware are exhibited in museums including the Cooper-Hewitt Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and the Vitra Design Museum. Its stackable Hellerware won the Italian design award, the Compasso d'Oro.
The company was founded in 1971 by Alan Heller. [1] [2] Heller's first line of products was a set of stackable dinnerware known as "Hellerware" [3] designed by Lella and Massimo Vignelli. [4] [5] This design was originally manufactured in Italy and was awarded the 1964 Compasso d'Oro. Heller brought the design to America after the Italian manufacturer ceased production, and revived the product line in America. [6] The brightly-colored Hellerware was seen as a "design classic and signified the 1970s and 1980s" [7] alongside fashionable Marimekko fabrics. [7] A "large selection" of Hellerware is held in the Plastics Collection at Syracuse University Library, with other examples at the Museum of Modern Art and New York's Cooper-Hewitt Museum. [6]
The "sexualised mood" [8] of the 1960s was reflected in items such as Studio 65's Bocca sofa (Italian for "mouth"). Resembling a large pair of red lips, it was originally named "Marilyn" after Marilyn Monroe. [9] [10] [8] The designer was the architect Franco Audrito. Heller has sold it since the 1970s; it was initially made of polyurethane covered with fabric; a modern version is made of waterproof resin polymer. [11] It is displayed in design museum collections including the Vitra Design Museum [12] and the Museum of Modern Art. [13]
Heller died in 2021 and the company was subsequently purchased by John Edelman, who had known Heller well, and John McPhee. [14] [15] Asked what the brand represented, Edelman replied "Accessible. Iconic. Modern." and "I think Heller strikes a chord not only in architects and designers but also regular consumers when the name is mentioned. “Hellerware” was part of many people’s childhoods. There’s a huge push to bring it back." [15]
In January 2023, Heller relaunched their Vignelli Dinnerware collection at MoMA Design Store, [16] leading to its being featured by partner companies. [17] Also in January 2023, Heller began to issue non-fungible tokens to guarantee the genuineness of their designer products such as the Vignelli rocker chair. [18]
The company's furniture and houseware have been described as "elegant, often whimsical but always affordable" by The New York Times , [19] "iconic" by the business news outlet OfficeInsight, [20] as "the cult favorite design brand" by Business of Home magazine, [14] and as "beautiful and timeless" by Architonic. [21] Heller's designers, described by Gray magazine as "some of the world’s most revered", [22] include the Canadian-born architect Frank Gehry, who has designed brightly-colored "cube" seating for the company. [23]
The company's plastic chair designed by Mario Bellini won a Gold Medal, the Compasso d'Oro, in Milan in 2001; [19] [7] it is exhibited in the Museum of Modern Art. [24] The Italian designer and architect Sergio Asti's 1972 ice bucket design for Heller is exhibited in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. [25]
Olivetti S.p.A. is an Italian manufacturer of computers, tablets, smartphones, printers and other such business products as calculators and fax machines.
Mario Bellini is an Italian architect and designer. After graduating from the Polytechnic University of Milan in 1959, Bellini pursued a career as an architect, exhibition designer, product designer, and furniture designer during the Italian economic boom of the late 20th century. Bellini has received several accolades in a variety of design fields, including eight Compasso d'Oro awards and the Gold Medal for Lifetime Achievement by the Triennale di Milano. In 2019, the Italian President of the Chamber of Deputies, Roberto Fico, awarded Bellini a career medal in recognition of his contributions to Italian architecture and design.
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Massimo Vignelli was an Italian designer who worked in a number of areas including packaging, houseware, furniture, public signage, and showroom design. He was the co-founder of Vignelli Associates, with his wife, Lella. His motto was, "If you can design one thing, you can design everything," which the broad range of his work reflects.
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Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec are brothers noted for their design work, which has been featured in publications and museums globally — and spans a wide range from tables and chairs to tableware, rugs, textile walls, office furniture, ceramics, art objects and urban projects.
Gufram is an Italian furniture manufacturer known for avant-garde, conceptual, witty, and Pop-art influenced designs; the unconventional use of industrial materials; collaborations with well known architects and designers; and the contribution its products made to the aesthetics of the 1960s Radical period of Italian design.
Lella Vignelli was an Italian architect, designer, and businesswomen. She collaborated closely throughout much of her life with her husband Massimo Vignelli, with whom she founded Vignelli Associates in 1971.
Rolf Fehlbaum is chairman emeritus and active member of the board of directors of Vitra, a family-owned furniture company with headquarters in Birsfelden, Switzerland.
Afra and Tobia Scarpa are award winning postmodern Italian architects and designers. Their pieces can be found in museums across the United States and Europe, including collections in MoMA and the Louvre Museum. They have collaborated with companies such as B&B Italia, San Lorenzo Silver, and Knoll International. They have won a number of awards such as the Compasso d'Oro in 1969 to the International Forum Design in 1992. Their design work consists of architecture and everyday household items including, furniture, clothing, interior design, art glass. They focused on the technical and aesthetic possibilities of materials in their designs. The couple was greatly influenced by Tobia’s father, Carlo Scarpa, a Venetian architect and designer.
The Vignelli Center for Design Studies, established in 2010, is a college of design at the Rochester Institute of Technology. Named after the New York City based Italian designers, Massimo and Lella Vignelli, this 15,500 square foot facility also holds the archives of their work as Vignelli Associates.
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Zanotta is an Italian furniture company particularly known for the iconic pieces of Italian design it produced in the 1960s, 70s, and 80s. These include the "Sacco" bean bag chair and "Blow", the first mass-produced inflatable chair. The company was founded in 1954 and has its main plant in Nova Milanese. In 1984 Zanotta established its experimental division, Zabro, headed by Alessandro Guerriero, with Alessandro Mendini and Stefano Casciani. Since the death of its founder, Aurelio Zanotta, in 1991, it has been run by members of his family. Zanotta's products were awarded the Compasso d'Oro in 1967, 1979, 1987 and 2020.
Studio 65 (Studiosessanta5) is an Italian architecture studio.
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the actress's mouth had been artfully transformed into a pout-shaped sofa. "What could represent the temple's Goddess better than a sofa, ironic and sensual, dressed in red," Audrito writes in his book, Il Mercante di Nuvole. They called it Marilyn (though it now goes by Bocca)
Since 1970, the Bocca has been used as a prop in television, film and more, and is celebrated all over the world. It's included in the permanent collections of a number of museums. Today, two versions of the sofa that differ slightly from one another with respect to materials are manufactured by Gufram (polyurethane and elastic fabric) and Heller (resin polymer plastic).
Designed by Sergio Asti (Italian, born 1926) Made by Heller Designs, Inc., New York (1971–present)