Description
The Ulm Stool - designed in 1955 by Max Bill, the first director of the Ulm University of Design, in collaboration with Hans Gugelot and Paul Hildinger for the students of this very university - is a piece of furniture that is as simple as it is multifunctional. It can serve as a seat, a side table, a shelf and a carrying aid for the books needed during studies. It is thus a prime example of the perfection that an object achieves when it can no longer be improved by omission. The variant recently added to it by its Swiss manufacturer - also a design by Master Bill himself - takes away one of these functions, but adds relevant functional value in the form of a drawer integrated without fittings.
Like the stool itself, this drawer is made of untreated spruce wood, worked with dovetailed edges and equipped with a simple but effective pull-out stop. The stool is thus deprived of its originally intended, but in practice rather rarely seen, functionality as a book carrier, but it fits noticeably better in the role it has grown over the decades as a night and side table.
Material: spruce wood natural, crossbars and base beech wood, drawer spruce wood natural, bottom poplar plywood (all wood origin Switzerland).
Height: 44cm
Depth: 39,5 cm
Weight: 3,5 kg