Hmm, how can I put it mildly... the phone is an amazing device. It is much faster than email and it makes things possible I forgot were possible. Today was amazing.
I "called" Herman Miller today, as I was very interested in sitting on a sofa. It was not just any sofa, it was that pretty amazing Goetz Sofa a contemporary classic designed by Mark Goetz, (the man behind Tz Design) for Herman Miller. The sofa is a bit like a mix of that Eames Lounge Chair, as it uses plywood for its frame but it also has some of those le Corbusier Petit Confort ideas, with the support being on the outside and the cushions being completely loose, simply held together by the structure of the design. (The Goetz sofa has some other brilliant qualities that are completely new and really brilliant. It is so incredibly precise that it would have been simply impossible to build before there were computer controlled saws. I mean, it is so precisely built, no human could possibly build it.)
So I called Herman Miller. And I was expecting to get one of those "your call is very important to us" messages. Instead I got a human voice. I told my story. I really wanted to try out this amazing sofa, I have heard great things about it, it looks great, but I can not find a place where I could actually sit on it. I mean, is it comfortable or just a concept?
The woman on the other end was surprisingly helpful (there had been no warning that our conversation were to be recorded.) She suggested several places of which I knew that they did not carry the sofa.
We walked in our conversation from places in Midtown all the way to Carroll Gardens. No, the sofa was nowhere to be found. I finally made a jokingly suggestion that maybe Mark Goetz, the man who invented and designed the sofa would probably know where there was one to sit on.
The woman at Herman Miller agreed. Not only that, she also just gave me a phone number. "Why don't you give them a call. I bet they know where the sofa is in New York City."
"I can not call them. That is as if I called the Eamses to find out about a chair."
"I bet you will just get to speak with the receptionist."
We both laughed.
Yes, those TzDesign people would know where I could sit on the sofa. The receptionist would know.
So I called.
And I did not get the receptionist.
And it happened to be Mark Goetz' privat number.
Nice. Here I was calling the only living designer who has his sofa sold by Herman Miller. And I get to talk to him in person.
So, where can I sit on that Goetz Sofa?
Mark Goetz was incredibly friendly, especially considering that I was a stranger calling about a sofa and where I might be able to sit on it. He agreed that it was difficult to find a sofa out in the wild of New York. "They happen to sell out very quickly," he admitted. "It looks like the design really rocks," I said. I mean, it does.
Goetz remembered that there was a Herman Miller showroom on Madison Avenue, between 60th and 61st street. He actually even called information to get me the number(!)... wow.
I thanked him for the amazing design (on which I yet had to sit.)
He told me that Herman Miller had a version of the sofa on display which was covered in Paul Smith fabric. It apparently looked rather cool.
(The man was really incredibly friendly.)
So I called the showroom. Again an amazingly friendly person answered. I should just come by, just visit. Yes, they had the sofa on the floor.
I jumped in a cab. It was late in the day and the streets were quite clogged. I arrived at the entrance a bit late, actually far too late for the doorman of the building. He just looked at me as if I wanted to enter a temple after sunset. I was not welcomed here.
I called the showroom number. Again the friendly woman answered. She had been waiting for my arrival, and it was okay that I was a bit late, she knew I would be a little late. She called the concierge who just turned into a very different person. He made me sign in and I was allowed to enter.
On the 12th floor of 660 Madison Avenue, I entered a place I had not even known existed. Here they were all the pieces I somehow knew from books and Highbrow Furniture dot com
The objects here were somehow very special. Two of the Time Life Executive Chairs stood there, made out of Pony Fur, for example. (I do not think I have ever seen anything made out of Pony Fur up to this point in my life.
The friendly woman walked with me to the back of the showroom. Here it was, that Goetz Sofa in Paul Smith fabric and it looked much friendlier and much more elegant than I had expected.
I was offered some Pellegrino and I was just left alone with the object. Did I just call and did they keep the place open just so I can check the feeling of a sofa? I mean was this some sort of daydream or something? Did three phone calls just bring me into this amazing place?
The sofa was incredible by the way. A walnut shell held together some very well crafted grey cushions. Nothing was attached here, the pieces just naturally knew where they belonged. I sat on the piece, I spread myself as comfortably as possible, I relaxed. I removed all of the cushions, one by one, I examined the quality. I checked the walnut edge. Admired the inhumanly precise cuts on the walnut veneer.
Amazing stuff.
I was given samples.
I was given some more good advice.
I was given some pointers about objects not available for sale. (Some crazy Eames Table I did not know ever existed, for example.)
I left the place and walked onto Madison a little drunk from all the unexpected experiences.
And I definitely did not manage to describe them all correctly.
It was a really great evening.
What surprises.
How powerful of a tool is that phone.
How amazingly friendly can people be.
I am totally getting that sofa now. Seriously.
It is the good stuff.
All around.
(Oh, and I will get it from HighBrow.)
How a few phonecalls made me see a great side of Herman Miller, speak with Mark Goetz and sit on a really amazing sofa he created. (A version of it, executed in Paul Smith fabric, hidden on the 12th floor over Madison Avenue.) Wow, what an odd adventure.
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This page contains a single entry by Witold published on November 7, 2005 11:51 PM.
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whoa... i should print out this story and put it in a jar and bury it in the ground so someone can dig up my time capsule in 2050 and be amazed by this one time that a guy had not one, not two, but THREE amazing friendly phone calls in one day.
lovely story, and you tell it so well :)
hmm, you might be looking at the equivalent of a buried jar right here. : )
Great tale, Witold! First hand experiences about these pieces are so difficult to find. On which upholstery did you decide? Show!
Incidentally, I was thinking seriously about a Goetz a few months ago, but I fear it won't fit in my door.
ooooh. lucky you! that's the most beautiful sofa i've ever seen. :)
coincidentally, i had a strange dream about an eames chair just last night! one that has never existed (that i know of) and it was just sitting in my little old lady neighbor's kitchen.
i'm also curious about your choice of fabric. do share. :)
Nice story. Nice sofa.
By the way, if you lived in Brazil, you would never be surprised with how amazing friendly people can be. People here are always friendly. Even with strangers. :-)
(okay, this is embarrassing somehow, but since I have the Eames Longe Chair in Walnut and Herman Miller Leather, I went for the Walnut version with Herman Miller Leather.
Herman Miller just went into a partnership with Edelman Leather (You might know the guy who drew the illustrations for their site,) but the super fancy leathers now available for the Goetz Sofa would have not matched my current furniture.
Crazy stuff really. I am getting the sofa in leather because I believe it is a real classic and so I want to keep the thing for the next 20 years or so. So I am just trying to be modest here. Really.
Ha! I wandered through here several months ago and you were being rather stern and ascetic about using only tables and chairs. Glad to see you saw the light. ;)
Stretch out and enjoy. (Is it permissible, just occasionally, to put your feet on a Goetz sofa?)
Sofa Proponent
it will definitely be possible to stretch out on it.
(I tested it in the showroom.)
It will take about 20 days or so to make it here. It is not made yet.
(Or so I would like to think.)
: )
I UPHOLSTER THE GOETZ SOFA FOR HERNAN MILLER, YOU CAN ORDER THE LEGS WITHOUT LOCKTITE SO THEY CAN BE REMOVED.
wow, thank you for the advice Greg. I emailed the friendly people at highbrowfurniture.com I hope they can still put in the order for legs without Locktite.
Awesome. Thank you.
Great story. I want the sofa too. But probably not without sitting in it first. I actually also thought of calling Herman Miller and asking if they have one at their HQ in Grand Rapids, about 2 1/2 hrs away. I'm conviced it's comfortable. Do you think someone 6 feet tall could lie down on it stretched out?
so did you get the sofa yet?
is it good?
I am dying to know. Thanks.
The Sofa is supposed to arrive here next week, so I hear.
As far as I can remember, it was possible for me to stretch out on it. (I am about 6.3)...
I really can't wait either.
: )
"and then?"
:P
It is not here yet. I was charged for the piece, so I think it must have left Herman Miller some time last week. I think I will need to call HighbrowFurniture to investigate. Hmm... I can't wait. I really can't. ; ) I will not be here next week and then in a few weeks even out of the country. Oh well. Hmm.
Ok, I will check back here next month. Maybe I won't get one but I keep thinking about one (in strawberry ice cream boucle') so please post when you get it. TY.
There is certainly going to be a report here, as soon as I get the piece. : ) I emailed highbrow. : )
My Goetz sofa has the serial number GS 100 00 258. Hmm... I wonder if that means that it it the 258th manufactured.
It is beautiful. It was manufactured on December 13th this year.
It is really a heavy piece. It is really very beautiful.
I will need to describe it a bit more later. It just arrived less than an hour ago.
Okay, so I actually posted a little bit more about it now: Here is a bit more recent post about the sofa. I love it. It is much better than I had expected. It really surprised me with some details that are incredibly useful to me.
I was so excited when I saw it in person, I actually emailed Mark Goetz. That was rather silly. Maybe he thinks it is insane, but he probably at least got a smile out of my excited email. : )
this entry was unfortunately chosen as target by some spam master. I have to shut down the comments. sorry for that.