Weโre now well over a half-century past the heyday of mid-century modern design, and yet the style remains the epitome of cool. Even in 2023, go watch any movie, television show, music video or commercial that features a โcoolโ character and youโll find a plethora of designer furniture that originated in the 1950s and ’60s populating their timelessly stylish space. All of the hottest online DTC furniture brands, like Floyd, Article, Burrow and others, hang their hat on their sleek, MCM-inspired designs.
And without question, the most enduring aspect of mid-century modern design has got to be the chairs. Itโs safe to say that chair design peaked around 70 years ago, when luminaries like Charles and Ray Eames, Eero Saarinen, Hans Wegner and scores of other designers were sculpting gorgeous places to sit. Today, these designers are intrinsically linked with their chair designs. The Eameses with the Eames Lounge Chair. Saarinen with the Womb Chair. Wegner with his Shell Chair.
But there is one classic mid-century modern chair out there whose origin remains a mystery. Made up of an exposed solid walnut or teak frame with a slight recline and two loose rectangular cushions, the chair almost looks like a more extreme version of Jens Risomโs Jens Chair, with a style that just screams 1950s Danish modern and a whimsical edge that could have only been created during the Atomic Age. While it goes by many names, this chair is most commonly referred to as the Z Lounge Chair, so called for the dramatic way the sharp-angled arms and legs come together in the exposed wood frame in the shape of a โZโ when viewed from the side.
You have most definitely seen one before, as just about every staged mid-century modern home for sale online has one and many major furniture brands today make a version of it. Article calls theirs the Otio, Inside Weather has the Ace, Industry West sells the Penny, Joybird makes the Soto, and both Amazon and Wayfair sell countless versions of the Z Lounge Chair. These interpretations offer slight variations on the form, but it’s pretty undeniable what look they’re all going for. Perhaps it’s the overall lack of knowledge โ and copyright โ about the Z Chair’s provenance that has led to its prevalence. But I figured it was time to give the designer of this chair their due.
The Mysterious Poul Jensen
There is a lot of conflicting information online (surprise) when it comes to the Z Lounge Chair and who designed it, but most vintage models make a few things clear.
First is that early models of the chair, perhaps even the earliest, seem to date to the 1950s and were manufactured in Denmark by a now-defunct furniture brand called Selig. You’ll find examples like this all over sites like 1st Dibs and Chairish, where they frequently sell for anywhere between $2,000 and $4,000 a pop.
Second is that most of the listings โ particularly the pricier chairs โ attribute the chair to a designer named Poul Jensen. So that’s it then, another mystery solved. Good night, everybody!
Not so fast. The thing about Poul Jensen is that he’s a ghost. I don’t mean that in the literal sense โ though if he were designing furniture in the 1950s then he very well could be an actual spirit by now โ I mean that there is basically no information out there on this guy. Anywhere. Ostensibly the designer of an iconic peice of furniture, the man’s sole presence on Wikipedia is in the following single sentence at the bottom of a disambiguation page:
Poul Thorsbjerg Jensen (1922-2006), Danish furniture designer, mostly known for designing the Z chair, sold by Selig.
The Wikipedia entry did at least make Jensen seem more like a real person. He has a middle name! And it’s Thorsbjerg! And he lived from 1922 to 2006! Still, this didn’t give me a whole lot to go on, so I had to resort to enlisting some expert help.
Dominic Bradbury is a mid-century modern expert and author of Thames & Hudson’s massive tome Mid-Century Modern Design: A Complete Sourcebook. “I have to admit that I donโt have any special insights on the Z Chair,” Bradbury told me in an email. That wasn’t a huge surprise, as neither the chair nor the alleged designer are mentioned in Bradbury’s exhaustive book. But research from his new book, Mid-Century Modern Furniture offered a scaffolding to build from.
“Scissor leg chairs, including Z-framed chairs and X-framed chairs largely made of wood, were a repeated favorite among mid-century designers and makers interested in the combination of an expressive form, dynamic geometry and characterful materials,” Bradbury said. “One sees this in designs by Pierre Jeanneret, including his Model 92 Scissor Chair and Chandigarh Lounge Chairs, as well as pieces by Gianfranco Frattini for Cassina and in the work of Brazilian designer Josรฉ Zanine Caldas, along with pieces of Danish furniture.”
It seems as if nearly any designer from the mid-twentieth century could have designed the Z Lounge Chair and Bradbury didn’t have any information on the ghostly Poul Jensen. Though not for lack of trying. “I did check my go-to book on Danish furniture, Lars Dybdahlโs Furniture Boom, and there is no mention of Poul Jensen or Selig,” Bradbury told me. He also advised me to try getting in touch with Danish furniture experts or the art- and design-focused auction house Wight, as the latter had some alleged Jensen designs in stock.
Up for auction on Wight’s sister site Rago was a Z Chair that they attribute to Jensen (Wight could not be reached for comment). They also give a date of birth and death for the designer of … 1905-1990. That’s considerably different from our Wikipedia dates, so not ideal. Also up for auction through Wight was an angular teak wall-mounted vanity attributed to Jensen. Dated to 1957, this was the first design I’d seen attributed to Jensen outside of the Z Chair (and larger Z Sofas). Not only that, but Wight mentions that this same mirror belongs to the permanent collection at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. Certainly, this would add some credibility to Jensen’s name.
Except … not really. While The Met’s website does have a page for the vanity, there’s precious little information about it. The museum attributes the mirror, a gift to the museum from a Dr. and Mrs. Carl M. Barlow in 1981, to a Danish designer named “P. Jensen” while housing no other works from the designer and no information about him other than his name.
It all begins to make one wonder: Did Poul Jensen ever even exist?