Elegant Living Room Lounge Chairs , Molded Fiberglass Shell Arne Jacobsen Swan Chair
Negotiable /Set
Min.Order:1 Set
Shenzhen Nasida Furniture Company Limited
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Elegant Living Room Lounge Chairs , Molded Fiberglass Shell Arne Jacobsen Swan Chair
Quick Details
• Type: Living Room Furniture
• Specific Use: Living Room Chair
• General Use: Home Furniture
• Material: Fabric
• Appearance: Modern
• Style: Leisure Chair
• Folded: No
• Size: 72W*63D*78H
• Place of Origin: Guangdong, China (Mainland)
• Brand Name: Nasida
• Model Number: CH1149 – 3708
• Color: 3708
Description:
Arne Jacobsen Swan Chair
Item No. : CH149-3708#
1. Molded Fiberglass chair shell
2. Upholstery with Leather or fabric
3. Swivel fuction
4. Die-cast aluminum base
Specifications:
Product Name: |
Arne Jacobsen Swan Chair |
|
Designer: |
Arne Jacobsen |
|
Product No.: |
CH149 |
|
Product Material: |
cashmere fabric covering the high flexibility sponge and aluminum legs with fiberglass shell inside. Seat heigh 40cm |
|
Upholstery Material: |
cashmere fabric/ full Italian top grain leather/ full Italian Aniline leather |
|
Available Colors: |
Black, white, red, brown and so on. |
|
Product Dimension (cm): |
72W*63D*78H |
|
Package: |
K=K Carton |
K=K Carton |
Packing Size (cm): |
82×80×48 |
|
Single CBM: |
0.32 |
Designer introduction:
Arne Jacobsen
Arne Jacobsen (1902–1971) was the renaissance-man of Danish architecture and design. He mastered the whole gamut of the profession, and whether the object in question was a high-rise hotel, a chair or a door handle, he worked with an obvious enthusiasm and vigour.
Jacobsen was admitted to the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in 1924 and graduated in 1927. Soon after, in 1929, he won recognition for “The House of the Future” project, where he, in collaboration with Flemming Lassen, presented a daring vision, complete with helipad on the rooftop. Arne Jacobsen is considered to be one of the most important Scandinavian architects and designers in post-war time. He is the legendary creator of several 20th Century furniture icons, including e.g. The \"Egg\" chair, The \"Swan\" chair and the \"Ant\" and \"Seven series\" chairs.
Throughout his career Jacobsen maintained a high level of productivity. He designed a great number of single-family houses, summerhouses, larger apartment buildings such as the Bellavista complex, from 1934, and several public buildings, such as Søllerød and Århus Town Halls, both completed in 1942 and the Munkegaard School, from 1957. In 1964, St. Catherine’s College at Oxford University was inaugurated, earning him international fame.
But Jacobsen’s finest piece of work is perhaps the Royal Hotel in Copenhagen, completed in 1960. Here his talent was really brought out. In everything, from the elegant curtain-wall structure; over the furniture; the lamps; the textiles; the door handles; right down to the cutlery in the restaurant, Jacobsen’s steady hand was evident. Here, some of his best furniture was first introduced. The full, sculptural shapes of “The Egg” and “The Swan”, now considered modern furniture icons, constituted an interesting contrast to the angular, stringent building.
Another well-known Jacobsen creation is “the Ant Chair” designed in 1951 and introduced in 1952. This elegant, stackable, three-legged piece came about as a result of Jacobsen’s great interest in modern materials and new production techniques. The narrow ‘waist’, which gave the chair its name, was necessary because of Jacobsen’s wish to keep the bent plywood seat and back in one piece. A four-legged sister, “the 7 Chair”, designed in 1955, went on to become a major success with more than 5 millions copies sold worldwide.