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Space Age: the retro-futuristic style of the 60s

We travel back in time aboard a space shuttle to the Space Age of the 1960s. An era that, with the advent of space travel, among other things, was looking to the future. What did the future look like in the 1960s? Bright, white and reflective. Take a look with us!

Evelien
Evelien Bunnik-Remmelts

Like a rocket

The Space Age was a period of dazzling developments in new space technologies, played out - literally - as a space race between America, principally, and the then Soviet Union. When the first satellite, Sputnik 1, took to the skies in 1957, a new era began. Space was seen as a place of innovation and future. This was also evident in the film, music, fashion and design industries.

For example, the spacesuit with its round helmet inspired fashion designers, but also industrial designers: lampshades in the shape of spheres and UFOs were a big hit. Dark furniture with abstract shapes gave way to light, spatial, cocoon-like forms, with lots of white, silver and reflective surfaces.

Endless shapes

But it wasn't just the aesthetics of space that were imitated. The invention of new plastics really opened the doors of creativity for industrial designers, creating endless possibilities for form. Verner Panton's S chair, designed in 1959, is an example of progressive design from this period. It was the first chair made entirely from a single piece of plastic.

Other space-age classics include the Ball chair in fibreglass designed by Eero Aarnio, the Elda Lounge Chair designed by Joe Colombo and the Sputnik lamps, whose shape recalls that of the first satellite. All these creations - in terms of their materials and design - were aimed at the "future". And they have succeeded - these creations have been described as timeless.

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