Skip to content

Rare Otto Schulz for Boet Lounge Chair in Pink Wool Velvet

Sale price£33,351.21

Tearsheet
Otto Schulz for Boet, lounge chair, reupholstered in wool velvet “Gabriel Blush” by Pierre Frey, beech, Sweden, ca. 1932


A Different Vision of Modern Living

Otto Schulz (1882–1970), founder of the Gothenburg-based interior design company Boet, occupies a special position in the history of Swedish decorative arts. His designs from the interwar and postwar periods merged artisanal tradition with modern sensibility.


Between Softness and Structure

This very rare chair is a beautiful example of Otto Schulz’s output from the early 1930s and is depicted in several of his aquarelles. The design is distinguished by its tapered back, which sweeps in a continuous curve around the sitter. The vertically tufted backrest subtly curls over the armrests, while the pronounced piping further emphasizes the chair’s round contours, lending it an almost shell-like appearance. These soft, rounded forms are beautifully counterbalanced by the more cubist, rectilinear elements of the framework, paired with block-form feet, creating a compelling interplay between organic curvature and geometric restraint.

Newly upholstered in sumptuous dusty rose wool velvet by Pierre Frey, the lounge chair regains the luxurious and tactile quality that would have suited the sophisticated interiors for which Schulz originally designed such pieces.


Against Functionalist Orthodoxy
The design reflects an alternative approach to the functionalist ideals that were shaping Swedish modernism. In an era when the ideals of rationalism, technological progress, and social utility were celebrated as the hallmarks of design, Schulz and his firm Boet cultivated a language of comfort, craft, and decorative individuality.

By the end of the 1920s, functionalism had begun to gain ground among progressive architects and designers in Sweden, a movement that would become dominant after the Stockholm Exhibition of 1930. With over four million visitors, this landmark event introduced the general public to the aesthetics and social ambitions of modernism. Organized according to the principles of rational planning and industrial production, the exhibition promoted simplicity, light surfaces, and the reduction of ornament as visual expressions of social and technological progress. As Uno Åhrén (1897-1977) and other functionalist theorists argued, the new style was not merely a matter of form, but also of social responsibility. Design was to serve the collective needs of a modern society rather than the decorative desires of the individual.


The Human Interior

Otto Schulz’s response to this new order was neither overtly oppositional nor reactionary. Rather, he occupied an in-between position that reveals the pluralism of early modern Swedish design. While many of his contemporaries embraced simple shapes and inexpensive materials, Schulz continued to produce furniture that spoke to a cultivated bourgeois audience – consumers who valued comfort, quality, and visual richness. At Boet, the store he founded in Gothenburg, interiors were composed not of functionalist austerity but of upholstered chairs and sofas, polished woods with marquetry, and patterned textiles. He also created modular systems with modernist details like metal feet, yet their forms remained soft, tactile, and expressive.


Anticipating Swedish Modern

During the mid-1930s, Swedish design entered a new phase that softened the austerity of early functionalism. What would later be termed Swedish Modern emerged from this period, uniting modernist clarity of form with artisanal craftsmanship, natural materials, and an emphasis on comfort and domesticity. This aesthetic gained international recognition at the Paris World’s Fair in 1937 and the New York World’s Fair in 1939. The arrival of Josef Frank (1885-1967) at Svenskt Tenn in 1934 signaled this shift toward a softer, more human modernism that embraced history, color, and comfort. Schulz’s work anticipated many of these tendencies. His designs never fully abandoned tradition; instead, they evolved within it, designing exclusive and handcrafted furniture that balances tradition with function.


A Bourgeois Modernity

In retrospect, the armchair embodies what might be called a bourgeois modernity: a design ethos that accepted modern form but refused to abandon the values of home, tradition, and craft. Schulz’s work reminds us that the story of modern design was never linear or uniform. Even at the height of functionalism’s influence, there were designers who, through subtle means, resisted its dogma. Schulz’s lounge chair asserts that modern life could be not only rational and efficient, but also warm, beautiful, and deeply human.


Boet: Gothenburg's House of Modern Interiors

In central Gothenburg, one of Sweden’s most exclusive interior design shops, Firma Boet, was established during the interwar period. The store was founded in 1920 by the architect Otto Schulz, together with the Stockholm architect Adolf Nordinberg. Boet soon developed into a fully-stocked store with competitors in Sweden, and within a few decades, the shop was comparable – but also competitive – with the furnishing department at Nordiska Kompaniet or Firma Svenskt Tenn in Stockholm. In his solo efforts, Schulz continued to develop furniture designs that adapted to the changing times, and in relation to the trends of leading firms of the time, such as Swedish Grace during the 1920s and the Swedish Modern movement from the 1930s onwards. Schulz repeatedly emphasized his position as owner and artistic leader for Firma Boet. Schulz was also recognized for creating designs and individual furniture pieces featured in the firm’s magazine, Boet. However, it is likely that many other employees played a crucial role in supporting and boosting the production capabilities of the company.


Magazine Boet

The magazine Boet was a monthly magazine for home culture, crafts, and industrial art, published monthly from 1928 to 1938, with a special anniversary issue in 1945. The magazine primarily featured photographs and editorial texts about Firma Boet’s furniture and interiors, but it also contained a number of articles, reviews, and commentary. Boet enlisted a diverse group of contributors, including museum curators, theorists, critics, architects, craftsmen, designers, and representatives from the art industry. Many of these writers were actively involved in Gothenburg's cultural scene. They explored Boet from various angles, covering topics such as advancements in furniture design, architecture, interior decor, lighting, formal events, lighting fixtures, wallpapers, textiles, modern paintings, tapestries, decorative arts, and table settings.

Product Details

  • condition Good
  • creator Boet (Manufacturer)
  • creator Otto Schulz (Designer)
  • date of manufacture 1930s
  • dimensions Height 28.74 in. Width 32.28 in. Depth 31.89 in. Seat Height 15.75 in.
  • dimensions Height 73 cm Width 82 cm Depth 81 cm Seat Height 40 cm
  • material Beech Velvet
  • period 1930 - 1939
  • place of origin Sweden
  • style Scandinavian Modern
  • barcode 50119160

VAT within the EU: When buying or delivering an item within the EU, VAT usually applies and will be added.