Danish
 industrial designer Jens Quistgaard's clean-lined and immensely popular
 pieces for the Dansk brand of tableware, helped define the Scandinavian
 Modern style. As a child, Jens Quistgaard cheerfully made his own toys 
from the scraps of wood his father (Harald Q. - a well-known sculptor) 
brought home. As a young man, Mr. Quistgaard served an apprenticeship at
 Georg Jensen, the well-known Danish silversmiths. During World War II, 
he was a member of the Danish underground. Quistgaard is known for his 
fluid lines and for using unusual materials, often in combination. His 
signature pieces included salad bowls and cutting boards of teak and 
other exotic woods, and elegant stainless-steel flatware that was an 
affordable alternative to sterling silver. He was one of the first 
designers to rehabilitate enameled steel as a medium for cookware. For 
years enameled steel pots were considered lowbrow flimsy speckled things
 that were at home over a campfire but not in a bourgeois kitchen. His 
work, which won many international awards, is in the permanent 
collections of major museums, among them the Metropolitan Museum, the 
Museum of Modern Art and the Louvre. - See more at: 
http://www.deconet.com/decopedia/designer/Jens-Quistgaard-id-969;jsessionid=FC79ECD0BF1C277251DA9A18A9FB4E36#sthash.6Y7rkZS3.dpuf




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