Arne Jacobsen: the architect who turned hotels into design history
Arne Jacobsen designed Copenhagen's Royal Hotel from the cutlery up. The chairs that came out of those commissions became the most photographed shapes of mid-century. Here's the short field guide.
Arne Jacobsen listings show up most often from Danish and Dutch sellers, and our curators see strong demand from German and Belgian buyers. The Egg and the Swan move quickly when condition is good.
An architect first
Arne Jacobsen (1902 to 1971) was an architect by training, and that's the lens that explains his furniture. He didn't see a chair as a standalone object. He saw it as a component of a room, which was a component of a building, which was a component of a city. When he designed the Royal Hotel in Copenhagen in 1958, he designed everything in it, from the cutlery to the door handles to the chairs in the lobby. The chairs are what we still talk about.
I find this approach genuinely instructive. Jacobsen designed for a context. The Egg chair was meant to sit in the Royal Hotel lobby and give the person inside it a small private cocoon while the world walked past. You can feel that intention every time you sit in one.
The pieces that travelled
Three Jacobsen pieces became icons. All are still made by Fritz Hansen, his exclusive manufacturer for most of his career.
The Egg (1958), the deeply curved lounge chair with the high enclosing back, sells for €3,500 to €7,000 in good vintage condition on Whoppah. The Swan (1958), the smaller open-backed companion, runs €1,800 to €3,800.
The Series 7 chair (1955), the moulded plywood stacking chair you see in offices, cafés and the famous Lewis Morley photograph of Christine Keeler, is the affordable entry. €250 to €500 each, sometimes less if you find a set. Genuinely useful furniture that happens to be canonical.
The Ant chair (1952), with its three legs and curved plywood seat, is its smaller cousin. €350 to €700.
What about the cutlery
If you want a quick, low-stakes way to live with Jacobsen, his AJ cutlery (1957) for Georg Jensen is still in production and shows up on Whoppah as both vintage and current sets. Stanley Kubrick chose it for 2001: A Space Odyssey because it looked like the future. It still does.
How to recognise the real thing
Every authentic Jacobsen carries Fritz Hansen branding. On the Egg and Swan, look for the Fritz Hansen disc on the underside of the seat. On Series 7 chairs, the marking is on the underside near the leg connection. Beware unbranded "Jacobsen-style" chairs from generic Italian factories: they exist in large numbers and are not the same object.
Reupholstery is common on the Egg and Swan because the original fabric or leather wears. That's accepted and not a value-killer, as long as the frame is original Fritz Hansen.
I think Jacobsen is one of the most enjoyable designers to live with, because the pieces have a confidence that doesn't shout. Worth the price band, in my view.




