LK48 genel seating
In the early 1950s, Louis Kahn was defining the tenets that would be central to his work—not only for large-scale public buildings, but for the handful of private homes he designed and built. The Genel Residence near Philadelphia offered Kahn an opportunity to explore his nascent philosophy at the intimate scale of the domestic and the individual.
Built of cedar and stone, the Genel House reveals Kahn’s virtuosity with volumes and planes, materials and light. Inside, an H-shaped plan creates distinct realms of public and private life, spaces that evoke a feeling of intended use. A living area bathed in natural light transforms a marble fireplace and redwood panels into reflective surfaces. Brick, stone, and exposed structural elements throughout create an informality that is nonetheless highly refined.
Alluding to Kahn’s humanistic ethos, Genel Seating captures a spirit of clarity and simplicity that underpins an emotional tenor of calm and dignity within the residence. The chair’s proportions echo the rhythms of the house, the asymmetry of the roofline. Its appeal to comfort nods to Kahn’s belief that form should not only follow function but also tap into human emotions.
In an era that often celebrates spectacle, Genel Seating honors the elemental and enduring forms that outlast time. Genel Seating invites us to confront complexity with order, to meet chaos with stillness, to quieten the noise with timeless beauty.
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