The Y Chair, Hans J. Wegner, 1960
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The Tulip Chair by Eero Saarinen, 1956
The Tulip Chair is one of a series of chairs, stools, and tables developed by Eero
Saarinen within a five-year period. The characteristic feature of the series is that
the supporting structure has been pared to a central supporting stem like a wineglass
in order to emphasise the uniformity of table and chair.
Eero Saarinen describes the Tulip Chair: "The bases of tables and chairs in a typical
furniture arrangement create an ugly, confusing, and restless world. I wanted to
design a chair as an integrated whole once again. All important furniture of the
past always had a holistic structure, from King Tut's chair to that of Thomas Chippendale.
Today, we are parting ways with this holism with our predilection for plastic and
laminated wood shells. I am looking forward to the point when the plastics industry
will be capable of manufacturing the chair using just one material, the way I have
designed it."
tagged with: art design furniture
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The Panton Chair by Verner Panton, 1959
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