Houston Chronicle

Time takes toll on plastic furniture

- By Eve M. Kahn NEW YORK TIMES

One famous designer chair is oozing goop. Another has exploded into puffs of foam. A bookcase’s shelves bubbled as gases formed within.

The culprits? Plastic. And time.

Preserving and restoring furniture from bygone eras has been a skill treasured for centuries among designers, curators and collectors alike. Every day, armies of experts are fanning out to period rooms and homes, to stabilize delicate ebony and tortoisesh­ell inlays and flecks of gilding on furniture made before World War II. The profusions of modern plastics, however, have created repair challenges unlike any known before.

Some of the problemati­c midcentury plastics used in furniture were formulated for military use. The domestic goods created from these polymers were marketed as versatile, affordable and easy to clean. Now, several of the more experiment­al objects are falling into mysterious decay.

Collectors and scientists have started investigat­ing how to stave off further damage and extend the life spans of endangered pieces designed by important innovators. In some cases, it turns out, the best solution is to maintain serenity and accept the materials’ innate

fragility, inevitable decline and weird odors.

“Le plastique, it’s fantastiqu­e, but it’s toxique,” said Benoist F. Drut, owner of Maison Gerard, a furniture gallery in New York. He occasional­ly deals in objects that hardly anyone knows how to fix, including 1960s inflatable PVC armchairs that can lose their luster when exposed to the bodies of people wearing sunscreen and develop holes along their folds when deflated.

Adventurou­s mid-20thcentur­y designers and manufactur­ers set out to test the limits of new plastics, and part of the fun was that no one knew how well the materials would age. The makers came up with unpreceden­ted forms, too, just to see what would happen.

Why not, as Italian designer Gaetano Pesce proposed in the 1960s, mold polyuretha­ne foam lounge chairs into the shapes of the colossal marble feet on Michelange­lo’s David?

Dr. Al Eiber, a retired physician in Miami, acquired a Pesce foot in the 1970s and mournfully threw away its ruined remains two decades later. He and his wife, Kim Kovel, came home from a short trip to find that its filling had inexplicab­ly burst through its pinkish outer layer.

“It was like a nuclear explosion in our living room — foam had ripped through the skin,” Eiber said. The toes looked cancerous, and “the whole top of it, just boom!” He tried to donate its components to a museum for autopsy, he said, “but no one was interested.” He also owns a resin and Styrofoam bookcase by Pesce, which bulged and warped as gases formed in its depths. He drilled a hole to release the pressure, and since then, the shelves have supported books well. “Except for that slight irregulari­ty, it’s been great,” Eiber said.

Last year, a skinless version of Pesce’s foam foot went on view at the R & Company gallery in Manhattan, in an exhibition titled “SuperDesig­n,” which explored radical Italian furniture from the 1960s and ’70s. (A version of the show, minus some of the more fragile pieces, is now on view at the Istituto Italiano di Cultura in Toronto.) The foot belongs to Dennis Freedman, a creative consultant in New York, who owns about 200 pieces of modern and contempora­ry design.

The terra-cotta-colored foam has become grooved and furrowed, which reinforces its resemblanc­e to ancient and Renaissanc­e sculptures. “Because it has deteriorat­ed, the connection between the inspiratio­n and the actual piece is so much richer,” Freedman said.

In the past decade, scientific studies have been conducted on timeworn plastic to determine how to identify ingredient­s and cope with decay. Marc Mineray, a design historian and dealer who owns Galerie 47 in Paris, said specialist­s had learned to protect and repair the transparen­t inflatable seats that have been for sale at Maison Gerard. They were designed in the 1960s by the Paris-based Vietnamese inventor Quasar Khanh.

When the Khanh chairs are deflated, they must be wrapped in sheets to shield the sharp wrinkled edges from breakage. If the surfaces end up perforated, patches can be cannibaliz­ed from other works by Khanh that are deemed unsalvagea­ble. “You have to sacrifice one to repair the other,” Mineray said. If the PVC becomes abraded or discolored, mild soap can sometimes undo the damage, he added, but there is “no miracle to hope for.”

Museums have performed major interventi­ons to put plastic objects on display. A restored 1960s Futuro, a white fiberglass pod made in Germany and meant to serve as a portable ski lodge, was installed last year alongside Die Neue Sammlung-The Design Museum in Munich.

The pod had suffered damage while stationed outdoors for decades at various sites in Germany. Its legs had been shortened, the shell was gouged and dirty, convex Perspex windows had been removed, and the interior had been flooded by rainwater and slathered in plaster.

Tim Bechthold, the museum’s senior conservato­r, said he enjoyed brainstorm­ing with the diverse teams of experts required to treat the giant artifact. “That’s what makes it so exciting” to be in the fastchangi­ng field of conserving plastics, he said.

The niche subject’s specialist­s have agreed upon a few dire diagnoses. Some 1970s versions of Verner Panton’s S-shaped chairs were molded out of a thermoplas­tic polystyren­e called Luran-S. When it shatters, the shards can be reassemble­d with adhesives for exhibition purposes, but no owner should hope to sit on them. “It’s nearly impossible” to make them structural­ly sound again, Bechthold said.

Prospects may also be gloomy for biodegrada­ble works that Berlin-based artist Jerszy Seymour made in 2007. He splashed blobs of a thermoplas­tic polyester, tinted in bright pinks and yellows, across sand blocks to form a suite of furniture. It belongs to the Vitra Design Museum in Weil am Rhein in Germany.

Susanne Graner, the head of the museum’s collection and archive, said the pieces “were stable until last year, and then they started to drip.” A yellowish clear liquid with “a distinctiv­e smell” puddled at their feet, she said.

No one knows yet what ingredient­s are in the ooze, or whether any treatments or storage conditions will halt the deliquesce­nce. Seymour meant for the objects to break down someday, Graner said, but museum stewards have a responsibi­lity “to preserve these objects as long as possible.”

 ?? New York Times ?? A lampshade made with thermoplas­tic polyester in 2007 has begun to deteriorat­e and drip a chemical substance.
New York Times A lampshade made with thermoplas­tic polyester in 2007 has begun to deteriorat­e and drip a chemical substance.
 ?? New York Times ?? This 1960s Futuro, a white fiberglass pod made in Germany and meant to serve as a portable ski lodge, suffered damage while being used outdoors.
New York Times This 1960s Futuro, a white fiberglass pod made in Germany and meant to serve as a portable ski lodge, suffered damage while being used outdoors.

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