Nanna Ditzel & Jørgen Ditzel
One of Danish design’s most distinctive personalities.
Design in generous forms inspired by organic modernism.
Danish architect duo Nanna Ditzel (1923-2005) and Jørgen Ditzel (1921-1961) took an experimental and unconventional approach to design and, through their joint career, have left a significant mark on Danish design. Their innovative work aimed to rethink the functionalist design tradition and was honoured with major international awards. Growing up in Copenhagen, Nanna Ditzel (née Hauberg) always had a zeal for freedom and an urge to improve familiar everyday objects. This led her to train as a cabinetmaker – a very unusual career choice for a young woman in the 1940s – and later as a furniture architect at the Danish Design School and the Danish School of Architecture.
Nanna Ditzel and upholsterer Jørgen Ditzel studied under Kaare Klint, among others. Klint, now regarded as a pioneering reformer, took a radical approach to architecture and design by shifting away from traditional, style-driven teachings in favour of a more practical approach to architecture and furniture design. Later on, however, Nanna and Jørgen Ditzel broke away from the Klintian school of thought. Following their imagination, they created generous designs inspired by organic modernism, a philosophy that had flourished on the international design scene during the 1940s.
After graduating in 1946, the couple married and started a design studio together. The collaboration between Nanna and Jørgen Ditzel was enormously successful, and together they developed a range of furniture that broke with traditional design conventions. Combined with a spatial approach, they based their designs on the human body and did not shy away from challenging familiar materials and craft methods. In many ways, their designs and their endeavours to discover new forms and functions represented a kind of free play.
The couple aimed to develop furniture that supported a freer and richer life. Many of their furniture pieces were created to fit their own needs. One such piece was the legendary high chair, designed by Nanna and Jørgen Ditzel in 1954, which is now part of the Danish Culture Canon. During the 15 years they worked together, the couple received both silver and gold medals at the world famous Milan Triennal exhibition and the Lunning Prize. They were a key part of the avant-garde designers of the time who dared to embrace change and innovation and whose ideas resonated in an international context.
Jørgen Ditzel died after a short illness in 1961, aged just 39. His death left the young Nanna Ditzel with three small children to raise and the couple’s design studio to run. Nevertheless, during that time she managed to further refine her own expression and create a wide range of designs that are considered classics today.
Later on, Nanna Ditzel moved to London and, on returning to Copenhagen in 1987, she re-established a design studio in her own name. Nanna Ditzel went on to create a series of expressive designs that truly came to underscore her status as one of the great Danish designers, with a portfolio that includes furniture, utility items, jewelry and textiles. Nanna Ditzel worked and ran her studio until she passed away in 2005.
Our designers
When you choose a product from Carl Hansen & Søn, you get more than just a piece of furniture. You will become part of a long and proud tradition of beautiful and distinctive craftsmanship where nothing is left to chance. We are the world’s largest manufacturer of furniture designed by Hans J. Wegner, and we also produce furniture created by renowned furniture designers such as Arne Jacobsen, Børge Mogensen, Ole Wanscher, Kaare Klint, Poul Kjærholm, Bodil Kjær and Tadao Ando. Carl Hansen & Søn represents more than 100 years of Danish design history, and our furniture is sold worldwide.
* Five-year warranty on indoor furniture. Two-year warranty on outdoor furniture