Site icon Encyclopedia of Design

Ross Franklin Littell (1924 – 2000) American Textile and Furniture Designer

Advertisements
Ross Littell featured image
Ross Littell featured image

Ross Franklin Littell (1924 – 2000) was an American textile and furniture designer known for his practical, innovative, and minimalist style as part of the Good Design movement of the 1950s. He was born in Los Angeles. 

Education

After serving in the military, he graduated from Pratt Institute in New York with a degree in industrial design

Biography

He received an award from the American Institute of Decorators in 1949 when he was 25 years old for a low coffee table with tubular steel legs and a top made of birch dowels strung together within a gumwood frame with handles. The judges praised the table’s affordability, noting that it only cost $19.

Ross Littell’s signature designs were functional, purposeful, and enjoyable. The “New Furniture” line, which he designed with William Katavolos and Douglas Kelley for the Laverne Company in 1952, is now considered an essential collectable from the time. It combines angularity and elegance, Belgian marble, polished chrome, and woven white leather straps. The Museum of Modern Art in New York has the sling-leather and chrome-frame T-Chair from that series in its permanent design collection.

Littell’s work quickly drew the attention of well-known manufacturers such as Knoll and Herman Miller, with whom he did much work in the 1950s and 1960s. Littell’s 1959 textile design Criss-Cross for Knoll received a citation of merit from the American Institute of Decorators. In 1960, he moved to Copenhagen, then to Italy, where he worked on textile and furniture designs for several well-known European companies, including Unika Vaev in Denmark and DePadova in Italy.

Recognition

The T Chair won the 1952 AID award for the best USA furniture. Their work was shown at the 1953 and 1955 ‘Good Design’ exhibitions at the New York Museum of Modern Art, including Littell’s textile designs, and 1983—84 ‘Design Since 1945’ exhibition of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Group exhibitions

Sources

Byars, M., & Riley, T. (2004). The design encyclopedia. Laurence King Publishing.

Iovine, J. V. (2000, May 8). Ross Littell, 75, Who Designed Inventive Textiles and Furniture. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2000/05/08/nyregion/ross-littell-75-who-designed-inventive-textiles-and-furniture.html.

Ross Littell Biography. Casati Gallery. (2020, March 3). https://www.casatigallery.com/designers/ross-littell/.

Wikipedia contributors. (2020, December 26). Ross F. Littell. In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 07:17, May 13, 2021, from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ross_F._Littell&oldid=996390932

More American Furniture

Wharton Esherick (1887 – 1970) American Sculptor and Furniture Designer

As a result, his sculptural furniture and furnishings are his most well-known works. For his leadership in designing non-traditional designs and supporting and inspiring artists/craftspeople by example, Esherick was dubbed the “dean of American artisans” by his peers during his lifetime. Esherick’s impact can still be apparent in contemporary artisans’ work, especially in the Studio…

Keep reading

Muffy VanderBear Portrait Chair

Barbara Isenberg of New York inspected store inventories of soft toys in the mid-1970s and found them deficient. Isenberg wanted a teddy bear for her small kid that had the same quality, charm, and cozy textures as the ones she remembered from her youth.

Keep reading
Exit mobile version