Lolita by Rason
What do you think of when you hear “Lolita?” If you’re like most of the English-speaking (and some of the erstwhile Russian-speaking) world, you think “flirtatious and over-sexed youngster,” or perhaps, “pederast,” or—among the fewer ranks, but there even so, “tragically flawed anti-hero and child molester abuses the trust of libidinous pre-teen with a Father complex,” or something like that.
Being a litteratur and bibliophile, I tend to the latter. However despicable he would have been were he in the real world, Nabokov’s Humbert Humbert was an artist at heart, sublimely devoted to the aesthetics of his illusion—his great love for she of the name I discuss herein. All this by way of extracting meaning from Spanish designer Raul Romeu’s choice to call his expertly crafted solid walnut dining chair “Lolita.” Maybe the language gap is to blame. Maybe among Spanish speakers (and Portuguese for that matter), “Lolita” means little more than “little Lola,” though one would have to think that the worldly Latinos (ever more worldly than us insular Americanos), would have more than a passing familiarity with this masterwork of Western Lit. Perhaps it’s just a case of “contemporary designer goes cryptic,” as many a contemporary designer is wont to do. But enough…
Raul Romeu’s “Lolita” for Rason is a handsome dining chair in dark walnut and white. Reminiscent of the seamless wood manipulations of classic designers like Alvar Aalto, Lolita is solid enough to support the most prodigious of buttocks yet slim enough to integrate into any modern scheme. One striking aspect of the piece is its pseudo dual-wide seat, meaning it looks big enough for two but doesn’t quite achieve loveseat dimension. With an open back and consequent airy aspect, the chair makes great use of negative space. Uninhabited, it makes up a sort of interior window, thus inviting multiple views of other design elements. Paired in front of plate glass windows, for example, it plays with our perspective, inviting a dual vision of inside and out; or placed one across the other (with a glass table top in between, perhaps), it complicates notions of the meaning(s) of “transparent,” inviting, in one interpretation, the illusion that we might glide through our furnishings like water or like air—harmonious for Feng Shui devotees, but potentially perilous for the clumsy or the near-sighted. And as a closing thought, if you accept Kubrick’s reading in his version (Lolita, 1960), she started out as neither, but ended up as both.









Comments
Hi Joseph,
how are you? Many thanks for your post. Just we would like to know from where do you take the image and we inform you that Raul Romeu designer is not brazilian, he is Spanish.
Best regards,
Raúl Custodio
RASON HOME
sales and marketing manager
@ Raul, thanks for correction. I’ve already updated the article to credit Raul Romeu’s Spanish roots. I was the one whom located that image - I believe I captured directly from your website. But if you have more images (hi-res of course) that you’d like me to include, I’ll update that as well. Cheers.
Thanks for reading, Raul, and I’ll echo Jake in saying thanks for the correction (and ¡Que Viva España!). It’s a beautiful chair—hope you enjoyed the article.
Hi Jacob and Joseph,
Thanks again for your post. Very good article, congratulations!!! How can I send you quality images for the LOLITA chair and other products that we produce?
Thanks for your reply. Good luck!!!
Saludos
@ Raul, best thing to do is add the products to designerpages.com. I’ll grab the images from your product listings. You can register for an account @ designerpages.com/register/shop. Cheers.
[…] on a theme have taken the form of a chair built around negative space, as in Chair Lajt, the Lolita Chair, and the Fade Out Chair and a chair created from a solid expanse of translucent material. Notables […]
[…] term “negative space.”’ Like other products on 3rings that have made much from little (see Lolita Chair, Mundo Chair, Viktor Harmen’s Clear Chair, and especially Tokujin Yoshioka’s The Invisibles), […]