The PK65 Coffee Table by Poul Kjaerholm has a simple, uncluttered design with an original cross-shaped frame. Created in 1979, the construction of the table followed Kjaerholm’s extensive research into steel and its material qualities.
The frame is an artistic feature as well as a stable support of the top, which comes in a choice of quality marble or glass. The functional piece has a versatile use and will adapt easily to any interior décor.
Cuberious produces the PK65 Coffee Table with quality steel base. The 19 mm top is available in glass, and white or black marble. The PK65 was originally designed to match the PK20 chair.
The PK65 Coffee Table by Poul Kjaerholm has a simple, uncluttered design with an original cross-shaped frame. Created in 1979, the construction of the table followed Kjaerholm’s extensive research into steel and its material qualities.
The frame is an artistic feature as well as a stable support of the top, which comes in a choice of quality marble or glass. The functional piece has a versatile use and will adapt easily to any interior décor.
Cuberious produces the PK65 Coffee Table with quality steel base. The 19 mm top is available in glass, and white or black marble. The PK65 was originally designed to match the PK20 chair.
Lauded for his distinctive style of furniture design, Poul Kjaerholm was born in Øster Vrå, Denmark in 1929. His pieces are considered to contain a minimalist yet articulate form, all embossed with that signature style that continues to be celebrated worldwide to this day.
With the humble beginning as a cabinetmaker's apprentice with the firm Gronbech in 1948, Kjaerholm went on to forge his design ideology at the Danish School of Arts and Crafts in Copenhagen. Shirking away from the majority of his Scandinavian counterparts, the Dane chose steel as his primary material of choice over wood. "Steel’s constructive potential is not the only thing that interests me, the refraction of light on its surface is an important part of my artistic work.”
Awarded the prestigious Lunning Award and Grand Prize at the Milan Trennali in 1958 and 1960 respectively; Kjaerholm’s designs continue to be included in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and within numerous other museums across Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Germany.