Keep your device in portrait orientation for the best user experience.
Florence Knoll (1917–2019) was one of the defining figures of 20th-century design. As co-founder and design director of Knoll International, she reshaped the modern interior with an architectural clarity that still feels relevant today. Trained under Eliel Saarinen, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, and Marcel Breuer, she absorbed the essential lessons of the Bauhaus: that function and beauty are inseparable, and that good design must serve both purpose and human experience.
Knoll’s vision extended beyond furniture, she approached every space as a total composition, considering light, proportion, material, and flow with equal care. Her interiors for leading corporations of the 1950s and 1960s introduced a new language of modern professionalism: elegant, disciplined, and deeply human.
Alongside contemporaries like Eero Saarinen and Harry Bertoia, Florence Knoll helped establish a design legacy that defined the American modern aesthetic. Her work remains timeless, characterized by restraint, harmony, and a belief that thoughtful design can elevate everyday life.