Grete Jalk (18 June 1920 â 14 January 2006) was a Danish furniture designer. From the 1960s, she enhanced DenmarkâÂÂs reputation for modern furniture design. She edited the Danish magazine Mobilia and compiled a four-volume work on Danish furniture.
Born in Copenhagen, Jalk graduated from high school in modern languages and philosophy. She studied at the Design School for Women (1940âÂÂ43) under cabinetmaker Karen Margrethe Conradsen and completed her training at the Danish Design School in 1946, with additional instruction from Kaare Klint at the Royal AcademyâÂÂs Furniture School. She built connections with furniture designers, participated in annual competitions at the Design Museum and the Design SchoolâÂÂs furniture department, and taught at the latter from 1950 to 1960.
Jalk opened her design studio in 1953. Inspired by Alvar AaltoâÂÂs laminated bent-plywood furniture and Charles Eamesâ moulded plywood designs, she created bold, curved models. Her unconventional designs gained slow recognition but appeared in exhibitions and collections. In 1963, the Daily Mail launched a competition for a manâÂÂs and a womanâÂÂs chair. Jalk won first prize with two laminated armchairs, the He Chair and She Chair, but they never entered full production. Her associate, cabinetmaker Poul Jeppesen, made prototypes, which a fire destroyed, halting the project. In 2008, Lange Production began industrial production of the She Chair. Jalk continued collaborating with Jeppesen, notably on a 1962 side chair in laminated plywood.
Jalk designed practical furniture for manufacturers, including a high desk and stool, Oregon pine shelves, and chairs with upholstered seats and backs on curved steel bases. Her designs, economical in materials, suited efficient production and boosted DenmarkâÂÂs global reputation for furniture design. Firms in the United States and Finland produced some of her lines. Notable designs for modern homes include a wall-mounted storage system (1961), a living-room set with a coffee table (1962), and a âÂÂWatch and Listenâ unit (1963) with compartments for a stereo, TV, records, tapes, and speakers. Her best-known works include laminated plywood furniture for Jeppesen, such as the 1962 side chair, and tubular steel furniture for Fritz Hansen, such as the 1964 easy chair. In 1963, she designed a moulded teak chair, the No. 9-1 or GJ Chair, using two plywood pieces bent into complex forms. Manufactured by Poul Jeppesen, that chair strengthened ScandinaviaâÂÂs reputation for modern furniture. Jalk also designed wallpaper and upholstery for Unika Væv and silverware for Georg Jensen.
Jalk created exhibitions, including a 1974 travelling show for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, displayed at 25 global venues. The project used cube-shaped corrugated-cardboard boxes with silkscreen texts and logos, doubling as stands, wall displays, showcases, and light fixtures with support rods. She designed the Designs by Danish Women exhibition at CopenhagenâÂÂs Bella Center for the 1980 UN Conference on Women.
Jalk contributed to Danish furniture literature. She edited Mobilia, a furniture and interior design magazine, with Gunnar Bratvold from 1956 to 1962 and alone from 1968 to 1974 after BratvoldâÂÂs death. Her work led to a four-volume set on Danish furniture, considered a comprehensive resource.