Making the Ordinary Extraordinary

By R. Louis Bofferding

The great room of Dickinson's Firehouse residence in San Francisco. Photo by Fred Lyon

“One should never design with the idea of being extraordinary,” said John Dickinson, the San Francisco furniture and interior designer in a 1978 interview. “I don’t like viewing my designs as sculpture…this is not art, it’s decoration.” To say otherwise would have been pretentious, yet the quote doesn’t quite square with the work itself. Take, for example, three items: the armoire that’s trompe-l'œil-painted to resemble a Bay Area row house facade, the tables “draped” with galvanized-tin tablecloths, and the hand-carved African fetishes he mounted on bull-nosed bases, and sprayed with glossy white automobile enamel. All, like pretty much everything he designed, are nothing if not extraordinary.

“Design is like vocabulary. There are so many ways to say the same familiar things, so originality is paramount. After all, somehow, somewhere, it’s all been done before.”

Dickinson hit the mark, however, in another interview in which, to mix metaphors, he cracked the door open between design and art. “Design is like vocabulary. There are so many ways to say the same familiar things, so originality is paramount. After all, somehow, somewhere, it’s all been done before.” This explains the course he embarked on a decade earlier, when the concept of post modernism was still in gestation, which allowed him to tack between modernism and historicism, function and eccentricity. The result was a body of work that was, for the most part, practical, cerebral, and elegant.

These unique bar domes and console were designed for John Dickinson's Firehouse residence in San Francisco. In 1974, Dickinson featured them in one of the several decorator's spaces he designed for the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art's Art of Wine show. A drawing of the space illustrating these forms is now in the museum’s permanent collection.

There’s a fine line between fantasy and humor and out-and-out eccentricity. I rely on scale and proportion to create drama in a room and then the deft placement of a few amusing or witty things to take care of any pomposity it might have.

John Dickinson

John Dickinson

John Dickinson was a designer celebrated for cultivating an inventive style that blended diverse influences such as eighteenth century English forms, Art Deco, Greek classicism and surrealism, to create modern pieces that endure as both sophisticated and playful.

John Dickinson was born in 1920 and grew up in Berkeley. He attended the Parsons School of Design, where he studied under the renowned interior designer Albert Hadley. Dickinson worked for a few years in New York at interior design firms and department stores, but moved back to San Francisco to establish his own studio in 1956. Early influences for Dickinson included Jean-Michel Frank’s pared-down interiors, rendered in luxe materials and with a pastiche of historical styles, Serge Roche’s classicist re-imaginations and T.H. Robsjohn-Gibbings’ Klismos designs.

Dickinson mostly worked for a small, devoted circle of private collectors in California, designing rooms and homes for clients in totality, which is how he thought his vision was best expressed. He created his first widely-distributed pieces of furniture for Drexel’s Et Cetera line in 1965 and received his first large-scale commission in 1971 to design the interior of the I. Magnin department store on Michigan Avenue in Chicago. His first complete line of furniture debuted at Macy’s, San Francisco in 1978 and featured what had become emblems of Dickinson’s style: a monochromatic palette, tromp l’œil effects, using scale to dramatic effect and mixing historical and cultural motifs. The collection included stark white bookcases resembling skyscrapers, nightstands with Roman column bases, a dresser that appeared to be made of concrete slabs, tables with legs in the shape of animal bones and stackable trunks that looked as though they’d been buried for years and recently unearthed.

While lauded by the design community for its originality, the collection was expensive and its references were too erudite and eccentric for the average consumer. Dickinson’s focus returned to private commissions and in 1980 he completed the interiors for the one-hundred-room Sonoma Mission Inn & Spa, which was owned by a long-time supporter of his work, Carlene Safdie. In 1982 Dickinson passed away, leaving behind a singular body of work, that mostly only exists in his furniture designs; there is one extant Dickinson interior in a private home in Northern California and Dickinson’s former home, a renovated nineteenth century firehouse regarded as his magnum opus, no longer exists. San Francisco Museum of Modern Art holds a robust collection of Dickinson’s designs and held a retrospective of his work in 2003, honoring the unwavering commitment Dickinson had to creating designs that surprise, amuse and delight those who live with them.

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