an interview with Niels Strøyer Christophersen of Frama

One of the first events of 3daysofdesign was this evening when Marcus Fairs - the founder and editor of the online design site DEZEEN -interviewed Niels Strøyer Christophersen of Frama.

The interview was live streamed at 5pm

INTERVIEW WITH NIELS STRØYER CHRISTOPHERSEN

After a short introduction to Frama the interview goes on to look at the philosophy behind this small but important design studio that was established in 2011 and then discussed the release of a new book from Frama - PERCEPTION FORM.

Frama produce distinct furniture and objects for the home including lighting, glassware and ceramics, and they have one of the most stylish ‘eateries’ in the city. Their work has a distinct and coherent design aesthetic where they explore form and re examine function but, above all, their designs, although not minimalist as such, keep the working and manipulation of the material to a minimum to retain and show inherent qualities.

Niels talks here about holistic experiences and about welcoming space and about trying to recapture some of the curiosity and imagination of a child collecting found objects that are then imbued with specific and very personal value. He confesses to being a hoarder … but it is clearly not of objects of high cost but objects where their shape and form or colour and texture fit within what appears, initially, to be his spartan or almost monastic sense of style.

Frama makes an exceptionally valuable contribution to our debate about what we own and what we want and what we need in our day to day life.

Apotek 57 at Frama
Frama Permanent Collection


FRAMA
Fredericiagade 57,
1310 Copenhagen

 

Frama Permanent Collection

The catalogue for Frama Permanent Collection includes interesting quotations and some short comments or statements that hint at the ethos of the studio and stress the use of natural materials and the ‘simple geometries’ of the designs ‘resulting in a uniquely warm and honest aesthetic’.

Photographs show the furniture in stark and simple interiors so in a strongly defined space but not in an obvious room to blur any sense of a specific place.

The full catalogue has simple, neat, useful, outline drawings and basic information about designers and materials and dimensions but not, significantly, the date of the design. Presumably, it is called the Permanent Collection because the intention is to remove any sense of a specific time.

My impression is that, having brought together a substantial body of work, Frama will now add to or edit this collection with well-measured discernment.

There are four sections in the catalogue with:

ESSENTIALS
described as "utilitarian pieces" that includes the hall-mark, metal-framed, stools by Toke Lauridsen; the low aml stool in wood by Andreas Martin-Löf; benches; Chair 01 by Frama; a daybed; Shelf Library by Kim Richardt; box units in aluminium by Jonas Trampedach and the round and the rectangular trestle tables by Frama Studio. These are the key pieces.

SIGNATURE
pieces are marked out for their ‘extra sophisticated appearance’ and for more challenging and demanding knowledge for manufacture including the Skeleton 021 Chair designed by Elding Oscarsen Architects and the Triangolo Chair by Per Holland Bastrup

HOME GOODS
are ceramics - robust glazed stoneware by Frama Studio - and glassware for the table from 0405 Glass with some kitchen to table pieces such as cutting boards

LIGHTING
is distinct and a very interesting range of pendant lights, free standing spots and a take on the strip light and all with simple, but clever and elegant, geometric shapes in brass or copper, polished steel or aluminium and powder-coated steel or powder-coated aluminium

The Apothecary Collection and the free-standing units of Frama Studio Kitchen are dealt with separately but can all be seen on the Frama site

FRAMA - the apartment

FRAMA Permanent Collection

 

apotek 57 EATERY at Frama

Frama Studio Store in Copenhagen is in what was an old apothecary shop, in a fine 19th-century apartment building on the corner of Adelgade and Fredericiagade, across the road from a row of the Nyboder houses and close to the church of Sankt Paul.

On 1st October, alongside the store but also with it’s own entrance from the street, Frama opened Apotek 57 Eatery under the chef Chiara Barla.

There are two rooms but also tables and stools on the pavement with views across the quiet street to the famous ochre-yellow 17th and 18th-century houses of Nyboder.

Eating here is a good way to not just see but to use or try out furniture from Frama and to eat from and drink from their ceramics and glassware.

The food preparation and serving area has Frama shelving and units from the Tea Kitchen range but the revelation was to see the main table at the centre of the room - a large oak rectangle on Frama Farmhouse Trestles - with eight Chair 01 in light, dark and black-stained finish.

Somehow, for some reason, I had filed away the design of the chair in my mind as a statement piece …. as a chair to be used on its own in a hall or in a room as a desk chair … so hence as a special or statement piece of furniture.

But, of course, at the centre of most Danish homes, and at the centre of entertaining in the home, is the table where you feed family and friends and that means that the dining table and it’s chairs are important and a serious investment.

As apartments get smaller and family demographics are changing - Denmark has more single-adult households than any other European country - so I was beginning to wonder if the idea of the dining table as the centre of the home could be changing. But here, as the main feature of the Eatery, with eight chairs around the table and space for more, this is furniture that justifies and occupies the dining space.

If you are lucky enough to have a large dining room then this is a strong design but because the table top is on trestles and the chairs stack then they could take over a general or a relatively small room for an occasion but be moved back or moved out for the space to be used in other ways.

The menu and opening times for the Eatery are on the Frama site.

Nyboder

Frama Studio Store
Fredericiagade 57
1310 Copenhagen

 
L1165204.JPG
 
 

the Adam Stool

Sculpture is not just an important and useful record of historic styles of furniture and fashion ……

This is a bronze group by Gillian Wearing in the collection of Statens Museum for Kunst - the National Gallery in Copenhagen. With the title A real Danish family, it was produced in 2017, and that is the Adam Stool from the Copenhagen design studio FRAMA.

The shoes are fantastic but surely fashion historians a hundred years from now are going to wonder why collars on shirts were buttoned down and, even if they will work out that it was a feature designed initially to hold a neck tie neatly in place, they would wonder why he is not wearing a tie and as for men rolling up the cuffs and leaving their shirts hanging out … what was that all about?

Statens Museum for Kunst
FRAMA

 

Frama for 3daysofdesign

 

 

FRAMA studio and store in St. Pauls Apotek in Fredericiagade was open on the first evening of 3daysofdesign with people moving out onto the pavement to enjoy the warm weather.

This was an opportunity to show new additions to the collection - so a selection of cutlery in the ICHI range from Ole Palsby, now sold in the store, and a new tie in with home goods from the Japanese brand Ouur.

FRAMA

 

 
 

FRAMA - the apartment

 

 

For 3daysofdesign Niels Strøyer Christophersen of FRAMA opened his apartment on Strandboulevarden in Østerbro.

It's on the ground floor and at the corner of an apartment building that dates from around 1900 and, from the start, it was a shop with a small apartment behind as accommodation for the shopkeeper. This was a common arrangement in the city where many of the apartment buildings - from the late 19th century and then on through the 1920s and 1930s and 1940s - have commercial and shop space on the street level and particularly at the corners of the buildings.

The entrance into the shop from the street - with the doorway set across the angle of the cut-off corner - is typical of the period as are the high ceiling heights. The FRAMA store in Fredericiagade is another, an up-market version, of the same building type …. there a former apothecary shop, at the corner of an apartment building, with ornate ceilings and with shelving from the late 19th century surviving.

Beyond the main front room of the shop in the Strandboulevarden building, the apartment was relatively small with the windows of its main rooms looking out to the side street and smaller rooms, including the kitchen, with windows looking into the courtyard and with a door in the corner of the kitchen for access to a 'back' staircase and access to the courtyard itself ... a practical and, again, a common arrangement.

The last occupant of this shop and apartment was a watchmaker although it had been empty for several years before Niels took over the property.

Niels has combined together the space of the shop and the apartment for his home. He has stripped back the walls to raw plaster but decorative mouldings of plaster cornices and moulded decoration on the ceilings, where they survived, have been kept. However, architraves and all doors have been removed so that the space flows from one area to the next.

With the high ceilings, the windows are large but, because these look out directly onto the pavements to the street to the front and the street to the side, plain white blinds and plain full-length curtains in linen and in natural silk have been used to give some privacy. This use of plain textiles also means that there is a subtle control of light and a fluid and softer definition to the spaces and again the emphasis is on natural materials and in their natural colours.

Furniture in the apartment is, of course, from the FRAMA collection, and in this setting looks, of course, absolutely right. Again, this furniture is about using natural materials, so steel plate or wood or stone, and again used to emphasise natural colours and natural textures. Forms are plain and tend to look industrial because they keep to relatively simple shapes and emphasise or respect techniques and methods of fixing determined by the way the material are used when they are used honestly so used without pretension and, ostensibly, without reference to historic styles or traditional forms and shapes.

Although plain and without decoration, the furniture and the interiors are far from being unsophisticated and far far from being crudely made or simply designed so this is about a distinct and rather intellectual aesthetic that looks at interiors and at furniture in a different way.

FRAMA might appear to be a life-style design studio - particularly now with their apothecary range and with the book they have published with recipes - but it is about a serious and coherent design aesthetic that looks at materials in particular but also at texture and colour and form in a different way. It has to be significant that Niels has not followed a traditional design-school training. His is not a unique but is a rare way of seeing the design world … so perhaps the most obvious comparisons should be with the work of the English architect John Pawson - particularly his photography and his publications - and with interiors by David Chipperfield or the work of Vincent Van Duysen.

This is an aesthetic that is stripped back but not strictly minimal - plain and, in part, close to industrial design - particularly early industrial design from the late 19th and early 20th century - but not brutal and although, ironically, about product design it is also about very careful consideration and calm reflection before acquiring anything.

From seeing the apartment, there is a strong sense that anything from anywhere might be considered for inspiration but essentially this is about materials used in a simple almost engineered way that has to respect intrinsic qualities of colour, surface and texture.