"Climb in and enjoy your own isolated world. Everything that moves and swings seems to interest people," ponders designer Eero Aarnio when asked why this chair, which he designed back in 1963, still holds an attraction for people, one decade after another.
The ball shape is pleasing to the eye, but aesthetics are not the only reason for choosing it: this shape allows maximum durability with less material. It goes without saying that the shape of this fibreglass chair has not changed over time. Nowadays, however, you can order a new one that comes with armrests and audio functions.
Today the design value of this chair seems obvious to most, but things were different at the beginning. Aarnio remembers a manager at the furniture factory being so certain of the product's failure that he made a big promise while watching the first Ball Chairs being packed for a furniture show in Cologne:
'I shall eat my hat if even one of these sells,' he said.
Aarnio laughs when telling the story but does not let us know whether the manager actually did consume his hat. In any case, the chairs were sold for customers in as many as 27 countries within the first week alone!
Thousands more have been sold since then. The Ball Chair can be found in homes associated with many familiar names, among them Elton John, Bing Crosby, Princess Grace of Monaco, and Iran's former Empress Farah.
Today the Ball Chair has sales representatives in 62 countries, with sales being the highest in Germany and Japan.
An expert in the language of design innovation
Aarnio's groundbreaking design has been highly acclaimed around the globe and garnered remarkable recognition for him. An example brings this home: the New York Times crossword has given a certain word with four letters the clue 'innovative furniture designer Aarnio' a full seven times!
He does not consider his work typically Finnish, but one's origins always play a significant role, even if only in the background. In France, people have commented that the Ball Chair could not have been born in their country. Aarnio does believe there is some truth in this.
He explains: "France has an old and established culture, which can also become a burden when one is creating something new. In Finland, we are broadminded and down-to-earth; we can start designing new things without history slowing us down and limiting our imagination."
Aarnio has never had any limits when creating new ideas. Some time ago, he was asked to design a money‑collection box for Plan, an organisation that helps children in developing countries.
Before the first phone call was over, Aarnio had already come up with the idea of using his own Pastilli chair, which would make an excellent box for donations through only slight redesigning of the top portion.
"I had the box ready the following day. I am known as a pretty fast guy," laughs Aarnio.
These boxes for collecting donations can now be seen at Helsinki Airport, where they gather money to improve deprived children's quality of life.
There seems to be no end to the objects of his ideas. For example, chairs have been designed and manufactured for ages, and one could be easily forgiven for thinking they have been done to death and that nothing new could emerge, but Aarnio just laughs at this:
"Just think – the English alphabet has 26 letters, and how many different things can we create with them? The letters are building blocks that can be organised and reorganised in innumerable ways."
Text: Sami Laakso
Photos: Susa Junnola