Josef Frank Writings: Volumes 1-2

Josef Frank
Edited by Tano Bojankin
Contributions by Denise Scott Brown
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Josef Frank Writings: Volumes 1-2

Josef Frank
Edited by Tano Bojankin
Contributions by Denise Scott Brown
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Overview

900 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Sep 18, 2026
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 900
  • Publisher: DoppelHouse Press
  • ISBN: 9781954600492
  • Dimensions: 7.0" W x 3.0" L x 10.0" H
Josef Frank (15 July 1885 – 8 January 1967) was an Austrian and later Swedish, architect, artist, and designer. Together with Oskar Strnad, he created a concept of Modern houses, architecture, and interior design style based on comfort and ease. Known for his large colorful patterns and cozy interiors, Frank was a critic of Le Corbusier and the steel and glass modernism of the Bauhaus. After leaving Austria due to rising antisemitism, Josef Frank started working at Swedish interior design store Svenskt Tenn in 1934, where he became a key figure in shaping the company's design identity. During World War II, with the threat of Germany invading Sweden, Frank fled to New York, where he lived and taught at The New School between 1941–1945. He is today considered one of the most important Swedish designers. Beyond his pioneering architectural work, Frank was a cultural design critic, whose pragmatic approach to design and living highlighted the social experience as much as the aesthetic one. His works were prized and collected by Prince Eugen of Sweden and are presently featured throughout many prominent public art collections, including at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the MAK in Vienna, the Röhsska museet in Göteborg, Sweden, and many others. His influence continues to be felt around the world.
"Few individual designers have such an enduring legacy as Josef Frank, who fled from his native Austria to Sweden in the 1930s and became involved with the now-iconic homewares shop Svenskt Tenn not long after it was founded. The fabrics he designed for the shop are instantly recognisable: each design in the vast collection is characterised by a distinctive combination of eclectic colour schemes and bold floral prints. It's hard to imagine how unusual they were at the time, as the clean linesand understated forms of modernism dominated the design world. Frank's work received lukewarm reviews from the press in Sweden when it first came out, but went on to become a defining element of Swedish culture."
-House & Garden, May 2, 2025
"Frank's Stockholm years shaped an approach that rejected 'total design', the Gesamtkunstwerk ideal of complete, controlled unity, in favor of something that centered humans and social life. He cheekily coined the term 'Accidentism', petitioning designers to leave room for spontaneity in their work.To understand the quiet radicalism of Frank's philosophy, it helps to remember the world he was working against. In Vienna in the 1930s, modernism had hardened into dogma -rationalto the point of austerity, obsessed with purity and control. Adolf Loos declared ornament' as crime.' Frank, a Jewish architect and designer in a climate hostile to both his identity and his ideas, stood apart. His clients, often fellow outsiders, sought homes that referenced design from places and times separate from their increasingly inhospitable context. In response, Frank cultivated a pluralistic approach. He filled residences with pattern, color, and personal artifactsnot as decoration, but as small acts of resistance. His layered interiors were a deliberate defiance of rigidity - arguing that comfort, individuality, history and contradiction had a rightful place in modern life.-Commune Post, November 14, 2025
"Frank was interested in liveability, and the idea of a humanistic architecture that grew with its inhabitants. His thinking on design was insightful, human-centered and extremely relevant for our times."-Ilse Crawford
"Frank brought something to Sweden that we didn't have. His work makes you happy."-Maria Wiberg, Curator, Millesgården Museum

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