Null VITRA, Charles Ray EAMES, 1950, DSW Fiberglass chair
Steel wire and wood le…
Description

VITRA, Charles Ray EAMES, 1950, DSW Fiberglass chair Steel wire and wood legs with cross braces, non-stacking 30% black maple finish Shell in tinted, fiberglass-reinforced polyester Color Raw Umber 06 With seat upholstery Hopsak F60 fabric color 66 nero Basic dark felt glides for hard floors 05 Width 46.5 x depth 55 x height 83/43 cm

699 

VITRA, Charles Ray EAMES, 1950, DSW Fiberglass chair Steel wire and wood legs with cross braces, non-stacking 30% black maple finish Shell in tinted, fiberglass-reinforced polyester Color Raw Umber 06 With seat upholstery Hopsak F60 fabric color 66 nero Basic dark felt glides for hard floors 05 Width 46.5 x depth 55 x height 83/43 cm

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CHARLES EAMES (USA, 1907 - 1978) & RAY EAMES (USA, 1912 - 1988) for VITRA Editor. Soft-Pad high back office chair, model EA-219. Polished aluminum base and armrests, black leather upholstery, backrest with hopak, five-axis foot with casters. Adjustable height and tilt function. Made in Vitra 2006, with label. It has slight marks of use. Measurements: Height 100-115 cm. Width 58 cm. Dep. 43 cm. Seat height 44-59 cm. The Soft Pad office chair by Charles and Ray Eames was created in 1958 for Vitra. It features an argonomic shape that adapts easily to the contours of the body, and is in keeping with the elegant language developed by the Eames couple in the 1950s and 1960s. Charles and Ray Eames, a married couple and artistic couple, worked in the fields of industrial and graphic design, fine art and film, and are responsible for numerous designs that have become classics of the 20th century. Charles Eames studied architecture for two years at the University of Washington, then began his career working in a studio on residential housing projects. In 1938 he moved to Cranbrook, Michigan, to continue studying architecture and design at the city's Academy of Art. He would eventually teach there, heading the industrial design department. Together with Eero Saarinen, the son of his teacher Eliel Saarinen, he designed the trophy for the Organic Design Award, given by the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In 1941, after divorcing his first wife, he married his colleague at Cranbrook, Ray Kaiser. Together they settled in Los Angeles, where they would remain for the rest of their lives. In the late 1940s, Ray and Charles designed their home together, known as the "Eames House," now considered a masterpiece of modern architecture. In the 1950s the couple continued to work in architecture and furniture design, pioneering the use of new techniques and materials such as fiberglass and plastic resin in the manufacture of chairs. They are currently represented in the Design Museum in London and the MoMA in New York, among many others.

CHARLES EAMES (USA, 1907 - 1978) & RAY EAMES (USA, 1912 - 1988) for VITRA Editor. Soft Pad high-back office chair, model EA-219. Designed in 1958. New generation with chrome-plated frame, chrome-plated aluminium armrests, seat and backrest upholstered in black leather, backrest with black backrest pad, cantilever function and height-adjustable seat post, swivel with five-step base in chrome-plated aluminium with castors. With Vitra label 2003. Slight signs of use. Measurements: 61/48 cm (height). The Soft Pad office chair by Charles and Ray Eames was created in 1958 for Vitra. It has an argonomic shape that adapts easily to the contours of the body, and is in keeping with the elegant language developed by the Eames couple in the 1950s and 1960s. Charles and Ray Eames, a married couple and artistic couple, worked in the fields of industrial and graphic design, fine art and film, and are responsible for numerous designs that have become classics of the 20th century. Charles Eames studied architecture for two years at the University of Washington, then began his career working in a studio on residential housing projects. In 1938 he moved to Cranbrook, Michigan, to continue studying architecture and design at the city's Academy of Art. He eventually became a teacher there, heading the industrial design department. Together with Eero Saarinen, the son of his teacher Eliel Saarinen, he designed the trophy for the Organic Design Prize, awarded by the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In 1941, after divorcing his first wife, he married his colleague at Cranbrook, Ray Kaiser. Together they settled in Los Angeles, where they remained for the rest of their lives. In the late 1940s, Ray and Charles designed their home together, known as the "Eames House", now considered a masterpiece of modern architecture. In the 1950s the couple continued to work in architecture and furniture design, pioneering the use of new techniques and materials such as fibreglass and plastic resin in the manufacture of chairs. They are currently represented in the Design Museum in London and the MoMA in New York, among many others.