Ein Freischwinger aus den 1930er-1940er Jahren mit vernickeltem Gestell und schwarzer Lederpolsterung von Sitz, Rückenlehne und Armlehnen.

Unknown Cantilever Chair (1930s/1940s)

Date:

1930s to 1940s

Dimensions:

H x W x D - 81 cm x 65 cm x 70 cm

Sitting height 48 cm

Designer:

Unknown

Manufacturer:

Unknown, Czech Republic

Material & Technique:

Nickel-plated steel tube frame, padded seat and backrest (coil springs, leather upholstery), armrests covered in leather; seat and back frame made of beech wood.

Restoration Methods:

Reupholstering

Price: 3.500,00 €
(Tax included)

Description

This simple and elegant tubular steel cantilever chair is a typical piece from the 1930s. The chair displays a wonderful patina on its nickel-plated frame. The upholstery of the seat, backrest, and armrests has been renewed and covered in black leather. In this way, the tubular steel cantilever chair fits perfectly into modern living spaces as a classic nod to the modernist style of the 1930s.

Ein Freischwinger aus den 1930er-1940er Jahren mit vernickeltem Gestell und schwarzer Lederpolsterung von Sitz, Rückenlehne und Armlehnen.

Historical Context

Bauhaus / 1920s-1930s: The design of the Bauhaus era shaped modernism in the 20th century. The artists trained at and influenced by the Bauhaus created a completely new formal language in architecture and design based on the principle of reduced objectivity. Function was the decisive factor in furniture design. According to the guiding principle "form follows function", the utility and purpose of the furniture was placed in the foreground and combined with industrial manufacturing processes. This resulted above all in famous designs for tubular steel furniture, for example by Marcel Breuer, Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier. The tubular steel chair without back legs - also known as the cantilever chair - is exemplary of the creative impact of the Bauhaus in the field of furniture design. It created a new type of chair that became a modern design classic.