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1. The Womb Chair

8m · I Think About Art · 07 Apr 20:00

In the inaugural episode of I Think About Art, we're looking at the Womb Chair, designed by Eero Saarinen for Knoll Furniture in 1946 (production began in 1948).

The transcript for this episode can be found here.

References

Organic Design in Home Furnishings, Eliot F. Noyes, 1941

Knoll Furniture, 1938-1960, Steven & Linda Rouland, 1999

Saarinen, Pierluigi Serraino, 2006

Womb Chair & Ottoman, 1948 (Cooper Hewitt)

Womb Chair (DWR)

The Fiberglass Chairs—Something of How They Get the Way They Are (Film), Charles & Ray Eames

The episode 1. The Womb Chair from the podcast I Think About Art has a duration of 8:07. It was first published 07 Apr 20:00. The cover art and the content belong to their respective owners.

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References

Images:
"Wood Picture," c.1967
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Louise Nevelson, "Tropical Garden II," 1957
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Texts:

"How Mildred Thompson’s Vibrating Canvases Envisioned Our World As It Could Be," ARTNews, Maximilíano Durón, 2021
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Mildred Thompson, Melissa Messina, 2015
“Child of the Universe...Speak Like a Child,” The International Review of African American Art, Eric Hanks, 2007
Gumbo Ya Ya: An Anthology of Contemporary African American Women Artists, Leslie King Hammond, 1995
“Mildred Thompson, Sculptor: Experiences of a Black Artist in Europe and the United States,” Black Art: An International Quarterly, Mildred Thompson, 1977
Mildred Thompson: "Transitions" : sculpture, painting, graphics : October 19 through November 30, 1977
"Mildred Thompson: An Exile Back Home," The Washington Post, Jo Ann Lewis, 1977
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The transcript for this episode is available here.

References

“Juan Muñoz, Last Conversation Piece”

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References
“Wedgwood Dragon Lustre Bowl”

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“Wedgwood Fairyland Lustre Ghostly Wood Covered Malfrey Pot,” c. 1920

Wedgwood Fairyland Lustre: the Work of Daisy Makeig-Jones, Una des Fontaines, 1975

Some Glimpses of Fairyland, Daisy Makeig-Jones, 1921 (republished as Fairyland Wedgwood Ware, 1972)

Imps on a Bridge: Wedgwood Fairyland and Other Lustres, Harold B. Nelson & Jeri Vaughn, 2001

“Ghosts & Ghouls,” Weimer Museum of Decorative Arts, 2017

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References
“I See Red: Target,” 1992

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“'It's like we don't exist': Jaune Quick-to-See Smith on Native American artists,” The Guardian,Nadja Sayej, 2020

“Denadagohvgee (I Will See You Again),” National Gallery of Art Blog, Shana Condill, 2020

“Orange Car Crash Fourteen,” Andy Warhol, 1963

“Target, Johns (English),” [audio recording]

1. The Womb Chair

In the inaugural episode of I Think About Art, we're looking at the Womb Chair, designed by Eero Saarinen for Knoll Furniture in 1946 (production began in 1948).

The transcript for this episode can be found here.

References

Organic Design in Home Furnishings, Eliot F. Noyes, 1941

Knoll Furniture, 1938-1960, Steven & Linda Rouland, 1999

Saarinen, Pierluigi Serraino, 2006

Womb Chair & Ottoman, 1948 (Cooper Hewitt)

Womb Chair (DWR)

The Fiberglass Chairs—Something of How They Get the Way They Are (Film), Charles & Ray Eames

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