The story of the Danish mid-century architect and designer Grethe Meyer spans the fields of design, culture and womens history. It illustrates the complexities of being both a single mother and a pioneering architect at a time when her male colleagues dominated the field. Throughout her career, Grethe Meyers professional focus was on the major cultural shifts in 20th-century domestic life. She designed the table service Blue Line, which has elevated everyday meals in countless Danish homes for decades. She set a new course for cooking with her stoneware series Firepot, and in collaboration with her friend and lover, the renowned architect Børge Mogensen, she created furniture with staying power.
In many ways, she helped revolutionize Danish interior design and kitchen habits by infusing everyday life withsignificance, functionality and beauty. Her iconic designs, based on in-depth research into family life andhousing needs, shaped a new way of life rooted in the ideals of modernity and freedom shared by her now-canonized postwar generation of idealist architects and designers.
Dive into the most comprehensive work on one of Danish Modernisms leading women: Grethe Meyer.