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Anker Bak

Human-centric design

Danish cabinetmaker and designer Anker Bak considers design to be solutions to real problems for real people.

Designer and cabinetmaker Anker Bak (b. 1983) is known for his problem-solving and human-centric design approach. His designs are characterised by a profound understanding of needs, functionality and a deep respect for wood.

 

Anker Bak creates designs for people in different life situations and typically meet a need that he or close family members have experienced. When his point of departure is not close relationships, he is often inspired by observing and talking to people where they live and work. Japan in particular has become a great source of inspiration.

Anker Bak’s design is simple and functional. In addition to putting people first, Anker Bak’s design pursues a distinct Danish design tradition inspired by master designers such as Hans J. Wegner and Børge Mogensen. Bak feels particularly connected to Wegner, because, like Bak, he was a qualified cabinetmaker before he became a designer. Furthermore, Bak also endeavours to envision designs that will meet future needs so they can be as enduring as possible.

Anker Bak’s mode of expression is simple and functional. In addition to a human-centric approach, Anker Bak’s design pursues a distinct Danish design tradition inspired by master designers such as Hans J. Wegner and Børge Mogensen. Bak feels particularly connected to Wegner, because, like Bak, he was a qualified cabinetmaker before he became a designer. Furthermore, Bak also endeavours to envision designs that will meet future needs and, thus, will be as enduring as possible.

 

“To me, the design process is about observing, reflecting and drawing to make sure that the ideas actually work – not only on paper. I want my designs to resolve real problems for real people,”

says Anker Bak about his design philosophy.

Anker Bak was born and raised in the countryside of Denmark. He began pursuing a creative path early on when, as a dyslexic, he was allowed to take additional woodworking classes at school. But the ability to use his hands and process wood was particularly shaped at his grandfather’s woodcarving workshop in Sweden, where he learned to appreciate the value of detail in the woodworking process.

 

Bak trained as a cabinetmaker at a boatbuilding company in 2004, where he focused on making custom fittings for sailboats, which earned him a silver medal at the end of his apprenticeship. After completing his apprenticeship, Bak travelled the world and ended up working in Japan, Finland, China and Hawaii. He began to study manufacturing technology and was collaborating with designers from various industries, when his passion for wood and traditional joinery got the better of him. This explains why Bak returned to Denmark, where he graduated with a bachelor’s degree in furniture design from VIA University College in 2014.

Anker Bak has never lost his international perspective and he continues to create designs for companies both in Denmark and abroad. His unique appreciation of needs, function and materials has earned him numerous awards and recognitions. At the age of just 19, he won the Danish National Championship (SkillsDenmark) for cabinetmaking, and in recent years he has won the Wegner Prize, the Joinery Award (Snedkerprisen), the Finn Juhl Prize, the Ejvind & Inga Kold Christensen Prize and a Danish Design Award as ‘Designer of the Year’.

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