The Cesca chair ( / ˈtʃɛskə /) is a chair design created in 1928 by the Hungarian-American architect and designer Marcel Breuer. It consists of a tubular steel frame and a rattan seat and backing. [1] [2] The design was named as a tribute to Breuer's adopted daughter Francesca (nicknamed Cesca). [3] How To Purchase Marcel Breuer 1928 Designed in 1928, Marcel Breuer's Cesca chair married traditional craftsmanship with industrial methods and materials to help make tubular steel furniture an international sensation and a modern institution.
Marcel Breuer Grandes diseñadores Esencia
This record is a work in progress. If you have additional information or spotted an error, please send feedback to [email protected]. Marcel Breuer. Cesca Side Chair (model B32). 1928. Gebrüder Thonet, Vienna, Austria. Chrome-plated tubular steel, wood, and cane. 32 x 18 x 21 3/8 x 18 1/8" (81.3 x 45.7 x 54.3 x 46 cm). Purchase. 835.1942. History A champion of the modern movement and protégé of Bauhaus founder Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer is equally celebrated for his achievements in architecture and furniture. Breuer was an outstanding student and subsequently a master carpenter at the Bauhaus in the early 1920s. The Wassily Chair - The Groundbreaking Story Behind Marcel Breuer's MasterpieceDive into the captivating history of the Wassily Chair, Marcel Breuer's ground. Gallery label. 'Club' armchair, model B3 1925-6 Designed by Marcel Breuer (1902-81) Germany Manufactured 1927-8 by Standard Möbel, Berlin, or Thonet Möbel, Frankenberg Nickel-plated tubular steel, screwed together Upholstery (partly original): cotton canvas Supported by the Friends of the V&A Museum no. W.2-2005 This is one of the.
Chrome & leather B3 Wassily chair in black by Marcel Breuer for Gavina 109647
Marcel Breuer (Pécs, 1902-New York, 1981) enrolled at the Bauhaus in Weimar in 1921 as a student, becoming a 'young master' in 1925. He moved with the school from Weimar to Dessau, where he stayed until 1928. While at Dessau, he became director of the Bauhaus's carpentry workshop. El encuentro entre la rejilla de paja y el tubo de metal, la tradición y la innovación, Thonet y Bauhaus, es lo que caracteriza a la mítica silla B32, más conocida como Cesca, diseñada por Marcel Lajos Breuer. In this video we're giving you the history behind the legendary club chair, developed by Marcel Breuer between 1925-28. Nowadays it's known as the Wassily ch. First a student, then a teacher at the Dessau Bauhaus in Germany, Marcel Breuer advocated a global vision of architecture and design. ln 1922, while still a student, he produced this chair in the Bauhaus joinery workshops using just one material, maple wood, combined with a fabric made by the students in the textile workshop.
Marcel Breuer Wassily style lounge chair
Model B5 Chair 1926-1927 (designed), 1926-1927 (manufactured) This chair was a refinement of the first, somewhat complex tubular-steel chair without arms that Marcel Breuer designed in 1926. That design was used to furnish interiors at the Dessau Bauhaus school and in its masters' houses. Lattenstuhl ti 1a, Autor: Marcel Breuer, 1924 Siebenbrodt, Michael (2000): Bauhaus Weimar. Entwürfe für die Zukunft, Ostfildern-Ruit.
Model 'B33' cantilever chair, designed by Marcel Breuer, 1927-28. Manufactured by Thonet c.1930. Physical description. A chair with a single leg made from tubular steel that is attached to one end of the chair's seat and bent in an L shape The seat is constructed from a red fabric that is stretched in two parts across the seat and back rest. Marcel Breuer proyectó la No. B3 Chair, mejor conocida como silla Wassily, para la residencia de Kandinsky en Dessau, Alemania, donde estaba la Bauhaus School.. Su inspiración nace desde un modelo de acero de bicicleta, realizado anteriormente, la "Bicicleta Alder". Para esos años, el fabricante de acero alemán Mannesmann había ideado un proceso para producir tubos de acero sin.
Marcel Breuer diseñó la silla Wassily inspirándose en su bicicleta Cultura Inquieta
Marcel Breuer's Wassily Chair. A higher quality reproduction featuring the original specifications and features. Inspired by the handle bars of the vintage ". Above, Marcel Breuer's version of the cantilever chair, the B55 and the B8 stool, both created for Thonet in 1932. Steel tubing, when applied to furniture for the home, was one of the most dramatic innovations in 20th-century design. It created a striking new profile not just for chairs, but also desks and dining and coffee tables.