NC
KK-N01 side chair
W420×D510×H830×SH450
Beech – Clear / Grey / Black / Charcoal grey / Snow white / Dark wenge
Fabric – 6700-1 / 5778
The architect Kengo Kuma was assigned to design the Nezu Museum in Minamiaoyama in Tokyo.
One of our shops TIME & STYLE EXISTENCE (currently TIME & STYLE HOUSE STORAGE) is located
next to the museum. Knowing that Mr. Kuma would design the neighboring museum, we talked to
the person in charge in his office and the museum staff with the desire to make furniture for them.
This chair is the result of those conversations. Our relationship with Mr. Kuma deepened over time,
and we have been manufacturing furniture for many architectural projects.
The chair Mr. Kuma designed for the museum was simple. The thin, flat seat has a backrest that
traces a gentle arc, and stretching from the thin seat are four thin legs, the inner sides of which are
chamfered so that they appear sensitive. It seemed structurally hard to make this chair of wood, so
the only option left was to secure strength by adding a structure of invisible joints.
Unless we made the chair with only wood, there was no meaning in a design of this structure.
We repeated test production many times with the factory while discussing ways secure enough
strength using only wood, and finally completed the chair for the museum. Although it seems to be
a simple chair without any characteristics at first glance, it looks very cool when placed inside Mr.
Kuma’s architectural space. After all, I cannot help but feel that this chair is a part of his architecture;
therefore, the furniture harmonizes with the space. Although there are a number of masterpiece
chairs designed by architects, the best place to appreciate them is in architectural spaces designed
by their architects. This is how I knew that there exists a context for everything and felt closer to the
architecture of Mr. Kuma.