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Rosendahl

AJ Station Table Clock

by Arne Jacobsen, 1939/2011 - 2016 — CHF 140.00
Rosendahl AJ Station Table Clock

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AJ Station Table Clock

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CHF 140.00
8,1% VAT included
incl. shipping for orders over CHF 99 (Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Germany)
1 x in stock, delivery time 2-3 working days (country of delivery Switzerland)
In-stock Variants
3% advance payment discount: CHF 135.80 (Save CHF 4.20)
The station table clock by architect and designer Arne Jacobsen was developed in 1939 and launched by the manufacturer Rosendahl from 2011 to 2016. The timeless table clock with LED and alarm function comes in a range of classic color combinations and each giving any bedside table a noble touch.

Details

Product type Table clock
Dimensions Height: 12 cm
Ø: 11 cm
Weight 0,43 kg
Colours

In the black/white version, metal base silver, in all other versions gold
Material Glass, convex and unbreakable
Housing: ABS plastic
Function & properties Special IC alarm and sound
LED light
Battery 2 x AA
Variants Available in 4 colour combinations
Delivery includes Batteries not includederumfang enthalten
Care Dust can be easily removed with a soft duster.
Warranty 24 months
Product family All AJ clocks
Product presentation

Popular versions

AJ Station Table Clock, petrol blue / white
AJ Station Table Clock, green / white
AJ Station Table Clock, burgundy / white
AJ Station Table Clock, black / white

More about 'Arne Jacobsen' in our Journal

Icon of the Scandinavian Modernism: The SAS Royal Hotel by Arne Jacobsen in Copenhagen

...Why Arne Jacobsen Arne Jacobsen was chosen for this task – a logical decision that was hardly, if at all, a matter of chance... Space before Object – Arne Jacobsen’s Working Method What really sets the SAS Royal Hotel apart is not the individual furniture designs, but the way in which they came about...

Stühle zum (Be)Sitzen, a smow Pop-up at the Grassi Museum für Angewandte Kunst, Leipzig

...And an attempt to develop affordable, mass producible, furniture for a mass public in 1950s Denmark, an attempt to develop furniture appropriate for and responsive to the realities of 1950s Denmark, that can also be understood in the 1955 Series 7 by Arne Jacobsen... A work Jacobsen developed from the three-legged 1952 Ant chair, essentially, because Fritz Hansen wanted a four-legged side chair and Arne Jacobsen didn't want a four-legged Ant, and in many regards is that work which best typifies the move observable in context of the exhibition Arne Jacobsen – Designing Denmark at Trapholt, Kolding, in Jacobsen's oeuvre away from project specific designs which could become consumer products but weren't intended as consumer products, such as the Ant, to works designed for an anonymous mass public, such as Series 7; an indication of Jacobsen's increasing understanding after the 1939-1945 War of design as a component of wider society, of design as a service for society...

Arne Jacobsen – Designing Denmark at Trapholt, Kolding

..."Hvis jeg får et nyt liv, vil jeg være gartner", opined once the Danish architect and designer Arne Jacobsen... "If I have another life, I want to be a gardener" Not that, as Arne Jacobsen – Designing Denmark at Trapholt, Kolding, would tend to imply, he made an incorrect career choice...

smow Journal Design Calendar: April 28th 1925 – L'Exposition internationale des arts décoratifs et industriels modernes opens in Paris

...It must however also be noted that in addition to the absentees the 1925 exposition did represent an important milestone for several soon-to-be stars of their branches, including Poul Henningsen who was awarded a Gold Medal for what was to become the first in the now legendary PH lamp series,6 the then student Arne Jacobsen who was awarded a Silver Medal for a chair project,7 while a fresh faced Gio Ponti was awarded a coveted Grand Prix for a collection of objects for the Florentine porcelain manufacturer Richard Ginori... Carsten Thau & Kjeld Vindum, Arne Jacobsen, Danish Architectural Press, Kopenhagen, 2002 8...

Panton by Vitra at Wasserschloss Klaffenbach

...While still a student Verner Panton worked in Arne Jacobsen's Copenhagen office and was involved in the early development stages of the Ant Chair...

All 'Arne Jacobsen' Posts

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