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Продолжая разговор об эволюции офисного кресла, обратимся к работам дизайнеров 1930-1940-х гг. В этот период промышленность предлагала конторским работникам множество разных моделей, не отличавшихся революционными решениями в плане эргономики (да и сам этот термин еще не вошел в обиход дизайнеров). Рынок был преимущественно насыщен разнообразными вариациями кресел «Tan-Sad», аскетичными (хоть и симпатичными) стульями для машинисток (на фото 3-4 запечатлены стулья Виллема Гиспена, одно из которых подозрительно похоже на работу Шарлотты Перриан) или более традиционными креслами банковских служащих. К числу советских представителей последней категории можно отнести кабинетный стул из гарнитура «Хлеба коммунизма», спроектированного в 1937 г. для смоленского дома-коммуны Игорем Крестовским.

———

Let’s resume our discussion of the evolution of the office chair and focus on designs that were available in the 1930-1940s. The choice of office chair designs was quite diverse, but most of them failed to offer any revolutionary value in terms of their ergonomics (the term itself was not commonly used then in the design community). Offices were generally equipped with Tan-Sad’s chairs or their copycats, spartan but aesthetically pleasing typist chairs (pictures 3 and 4 show designs by Willem Gispen one of which is nearly identical to Perriand’s chair mentioned earlier), and more traditional-looking banker’s chairs. The last pictures in this selection show a Soviet variation of the latter created by Igor Krestovsky in 1937 as part of a furniture suite titled “The Harvest of Communism” he designed for what was referred to as “a house-commune” in Smolensk.

(photos here and below: jacksons.se, s16home.com, projectvintage.co.uk, artcurial.com, sonneveldhouse.com, thejumpingfrog.com, dorsetfinds.wordpress.com, vintage-design-point.be, capitoliumart.it, drouot.com, quittenbaum.de, phillips.com, moltenimuseum.com, buro247.ru, mydecor.ru, heritage-gallery.ru)



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Продолжая разговор об эволюции офисного кресла, обратимся к работам дизайнеров 1930-1940-х гг. В этот период промышленность предлагала конторским работникам множество разных моделей, не отличавшихся революционными решениями в плане эргономики (да и сам этот термин еще не вошел в обиход дизайнеров). Рынок был преимущественно насыщен разнообразными вариациями кресел «Tan-Sad», аскетичными (хоть и симпатичными) стульями для машинисток (на фото 3-4 запечатлены стулья Виллема Гиспена, одно из которых подозрительно похоже на работу Шарлотты Перриан) или более традиционными креслами банковских служащих. К числу советских представителей последней категории можно отнести кабинетный стул из гарнитура «Хлеба коммунизма», спроектированного в 1937 г. для смоленского дома-коммуны Игорем Крестовским.

———

Let’s resume our discussion of the evolution of the office chair and focus on designs that were available in the 1930-1940s. The choice of office chair designs was quite diverse, but most of them failed to offer any revolutionary value in terms of their ergonomics (the term itself was not commonly used then in the design community). Offices were generally equipped with Tan-Sad’s chairs or their copycats, spartan but aesthetically pleasing typist chairs (pictures 3 and 4 show designs by Willem Gispen one of which is nearly identical to Perriand’s chair mentioned earlier), and more traditional-looking banker’s chairs. The last pictures in this selection show a Soviet variation of the latter created by Igor Krestovsky in 1937 as part of a furniture suite titled “The Harvest of Communism” he designed for what was referred to as “a house-commune” in Smolensk.

(photos here and below: jacksons.se, s16home.com, projectvintage.co.uk, artcurial.com, sonneveldhouse.com, thejumpingfrog.com, dorsetfinds.wordpress.com, vintage-design-point.be, capitoliumart.it, drouot.com, quittenbaum.de, phillips.com, moltenimuseum.com, buro247.ru, mydecor.ru, heritage-gallery.ru)

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In February 2014, the Ukrainian people ousted pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovych, prompting Russia to invade and annex the Crimean peninsula. By the start of April, Pavel Durov had given his notice, with TechCrunch saying at the time that the CEO had resisted pressure to suppress pages criticizing the Russian government. The fake Zelenskiy account reached 20,000 followers on Telegram before it was shut down, a remedial action that experts say is all too rare. Oh no. There’s a certain degree of myth-making around what exactly went on, so take everything that follows lightly. Telegram was originally launched as a side project by the Durov brothers, with Nikolai handling the coding and Pavel as CEO, while both were at VK. Either way, Durov says that he withdrew his resignation but that he was ousted from his company anyway. Subsequently, control of the company was reportedly handed to oligarchs Alisher Usmanov and Igor Sechin, both allegedly close associates of Russian leader Vladimir Putin. There was another possible development: Reuters also reported that Ukraine said that Belarus could soon join the invasion of Ukraine. However, the AFP, citing a Pentagon official, said the U.S. hasn’t yet seen evidence that Belarusian troops are in Ukraine.
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