world. T e Finnish architect also designed equally futuristic looking furniture. Included in Vitra’s exhibition is a revolving, fi breglass chair he created for Finland’s fi rst all-plastic petrol station in 1969, the year that Apollo 11 fi rst landed humans on the moon. In the same year, Maurice Calka designed his plastic P.-D.G. Desk in a similar spirit. Incorporating an integrated swivel chair, telephone, intercom and television screen, its sleek white minimalist curves wouldn’t look out of place
The exhibition takes visitors from the early 20th century to the space age of the 1950s and 1960s, to recent design objects intended for the metaverse
on the Starship Enterprise. Moulded fi breglass also allowed Eero Aarnio to create his famous Pallo/Ball Chair (1963), the capsule-like form of which is reminiscent of an astronaut’s helmet. Olivier Mourgue’s 1964 Djinn lounge chair had a futuristic appeal that caught the eye of Stanley Kubrick, who included red versions on the space station in his visionary 1968 fi lm 2001: A Space Odyssey. Indeed, Mourgue’s furniture was more future oriented than perhaps intended, seemingly