Marcel Breuer's Isokon table as a case study for the museum object
In 1936, Hungarian-born Bauhaus designer Marcel Lajos Breuer (1902-81)
used cut and bent plywood to fashion a prototype of a wide, soft-edged
table for the Isokon Furniture Company in London. Today a fixture of the
Bauhaus collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum and an emblem of
the movement's furniture design sensibilities, Breuer's table presents
an interesting curatorial conundrum: what happens to an everyday object
when it becomes part of a museum collection
This book investigates the material stories, social practices and
various phases of commodification and ownership represented by this
single object. Delving into the detailed history behind Breuer's table
and the exhibition thereof, it also explores the institutional practices
of the museum in its project of object archival.