17
November 2025

Finn Juhl: The Fall and Rise of Denmark's Greatest Designer

The Arts Society Maidenhead
Monday, November 17, 2025 - 11:30
Baylis Theatre, Braywick Leisure Centre
Braywick Road Maidenhead SL6 1BN
Online Event

This lecture will look behind Finn Juhl's reversal of fortune.

Just what is it that artists and designers need to achieve and hold onto fame? Is genius enough? In the 1950s Finn Juhl was one of the most celebrated architects and designers in the world. Only 30 years later he had fallen into total obscurity, his works selling for a pittance. But today he is recognised as one of the giants of mid-century design - and one of his chairs achieved over £400,000 at auction. What was behind this extraordinary reversal in fortune, and what does it tell us about the vagaries of artistic success more generally? 

THE ARTS SOCIETY ACCREDITED LECTURER

Mr James Vaux

James Vaux is a researcher and lecturer on Nordic arts, culture, design and history. He has presented extensively on diverse topics throughout his career to demanding audiences across the globe, including CEOs and government ministers. His talks now focus on understanding artistic achievements through their historic, cultural and political context.  

James took a law degree at Oxford with First Class Honours and qualified as a solicitor before switching career. As a managing director of the international bank Rothschild, he advised governments and corporates worldwide. He set up and ran the bank’s Nordic operations, living and working in Scandinavia and immersing himself in the countries’ arts, culture and history.

James then gained an MA (Distinction) at UCL in Language, Culture and History (Scandinavian Studies). His dissertation was on Swedish design, and he specialised in landscapes, the Viking Age, politics and literature. He has also studied interior design at Inchbald, Mid-Century Modern at Sotheby’s Institute and electronic music at Point Blank. He hosted a local radio show for four years. He is currently lecturing in Sussex on Scandinavian Modern design, Danish design, Icelandic literature, Swedish literature and the role of modernism in the Cold War.