Warren McArthur Round Desk Chair Style No. 1083 AU Rome New York 1935/36
About the Item
- Creator:Warren McArthur (Designer),Warren McArthur Corporation (Manufacturer)
- Dimensions:Height: 34 in (86.36 cm)Diameter: 26 in (66.04 cm)Seat Height: 18 in (45.72 cm)
- Style:Art Deco (Of the Period)
- Materials and Techniques:Aluminum,Leather,Naugahyde,Rubber,Anodized,Brushed,Cast,Hand-Crafted,Lacquered,Machine-Made,Polished,Turned
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:1935-1936
- Condition:Replacements made: One or two of the rubber feet may have been replaced in the last 30 years. The seat and back cushion are newly upholstered. Reupholstered. Wear consistent with age and use.
- Seller Location:Camden, ME
- Reference Number:
Warren McArthur
Few 20th-century designers had influential furniture that regularly flew at 30,000 feet, but Warren McArthur did. His work on seating for military aircraft came near the end of his career, following decades of Machine Age furniture shaped from tubular forms and made of steel, chrome and aluminum.
Warren McArthur Jr. graduated with an engineering degree from Cornell University in 1908. After moving to Los Angeles in 1929, he founded the Warren McArthur Corporation a year later. His initial output of sleek, metal designs were popular in offices and hotels.
At the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair, Americans witnessed a new “Streamlined America” campaign, which included everyday furniture made from metal, opening the door for McArthur and other Machine Age designers to a residential audience. With this increase in demand for metal furniture, the Warren McArthur Corporation relocated to Rome, New York, and sold their aluminum furnishings out of a showroom on Park Avenue in New York City.
Actors Marlene Dietrich, Fredric March and Clark Gable were among his A-list clientele. McArthur also produced furniture for the dining cars on the Union Pacific Railroad and the Chrysler Headquarters. His designs were featured in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s 1934 exhibition “Contemporary American Industrial Art.”
During World War II, McArthur pivoted production after a ban on the private use of aluminum. McArthur made an estimated three-quarters of all American military aircraft seating, including adjustable seats for the Beechcraft C-45 and revolving seats for navigators aboard the Grumman HU-16 Albatross.
Warren McArthur closed his business in 1948. He died in 1961.
On 1stDibs, find vintage Warren McArthur armchairs, tables and other seating.
Warren McArthur Corporation
Few 20th-century designers had influential furniture that regularly flew at 30,000 feet, but Warren McArthur did. His work — and the work of his company, the Warren McArthur Corporation — on seating for military aircraft came near the end of his career, following decades of Machine Age furniture shaped from tubular forms and made of steel, chrome and aluminum.
Warren McArthur Jr. graduated with an engineering degree from Cornell University in 1908. After moving to Los Angeles in 1929, he founded the Warren McArthur Corporation a year later. His initial output of sleek, metal designs were popular in offices and hotels.
At the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair, Americans witnessed a new “Streamlined America” campaign, which included everyday furniture made from metal, opening the door for McArthur and other Machine Age designers to a residential audience. With this increase in demand for metal furniture, the Warren McArthur Corporation relocated to Rome, New York, and sold their aluminum furnishings out of a showroom on Park Avenue in New York City.
Actors Marlene Dietrich, Fredric March and Clark Gable were among his A-list clientele. McArthur also produced furniture for the dining cars on the Union Pacific Railroad and the Chrysler Headquarters. His designs were featured in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s 1934 exhibition “Contemporary American Industrial Art.”
During World War II, McArthur pivoted production after a ban on the private use of aluminum. McArthur made an estimated three-quarters of all American military aircraft seating, including adjustable seats for the Beechcraft C-45 and revolving seats for navigators aboard the Grumman HU-16 Albatross.
Warren McArthur closed his business in 1948. He died in 1961.
On 1stDibs, find vintage Warren McArthur armchairs, tables and other seating.
- ShippingRetrieving quote...Ships From: Camden, ME
- Return PolicyA return for this item may be initiated within 14 days of delivery.
- Warren McArthur Aluminium Armchair Style No 1170 AU, circa 1939By Warren McArthur, Warren McArthur CorporationLocated in Camden, MEA Warren McArthur aluminium armchair style no 1170 AU in excellent vintage condition. This chair is a classic example of Warren's mastery of tube bending. The elongated S of the b...Category
Vintage 1930s American Machine Age Office Chairs and Desk Chairs
MaterialsAluminum
- Warren McArthur Armchair Style No. 1038 AU, circa 1933-1935By Warren McArthur, Warren McArthur CorporationLocated in Camden, MEA Warren McArthur armchair from the early to mid-1930s has an anodized aluminum frame. Titled "The Office Manager" in his 1936 furniture catalog and listed as Style No. 1038 AU (arm ...Category
Vintage 1930s American Bauhaus Armchairs
MaterialsAluminum
- Warren McArthur Z Chair Model 708, circa 1938By Warren McArthur, Warren McArthur CorporationLocated in Camden, MEWarren McArthur anodixzed aluminum light armchair Model 708 manufactured by the Warren McArthur Corporation circa 1938.Category
Vintage 1930s American Art Deco Armchairs
MaterialsAluminum
- Rare Warren McArthur Arizona Biltmore Era Lounge Chair and Ottoman C. 1931By Warren McArthur, Warren McArthur CorporationLocated in Camden, MEA wonderful Warren McArthur club chair and ottoman that personify the comfort of his furniture. Warren's patented compression assembly was designed to provide flexibility in the frame to add more comfort via a slight flex in addition to the cushions. The aluminum strap back added to this flexibility in contrast to the rigid welded steel tube frame that was the standard of McArthur's contemporaries. This club chair and ottoman were manufactured at the Warren McArthur Furniture Company in Los Angeles between 1931/33. The chair's design, while similar in overall look, predates Warren McArthur's classic Park Avenue Lounge (Style No. 1003 EAU p. 9 of his 1936 corporation catalog) by at least two years. This is the only example of this chair that I have seen. The pair was said to have come from the Arizona Biltmore but I cannot confirm that provenance. The absence of labels is typical of all Arizona Biltmore furniture...Category
Mid-20th Century American Machine Age Club Chairs
MaterialsAluminum
- Warren McArthur Console Sky Blue Cafolite Top c. 1935By Warren McArthur, Warren McArthur CorporationLocated in Camden, MEUnusual Warren McArthur console or perhaps a work table from a department store or beauty salon cosmetic cubicle. The sky blue Cafolite top was produced for the Warren McArthur Corp...Category
Vintage 1930s American Machine Age Console Tables
MaterialsAluminum
- Warren McArthur Vanity Stool Style No. 1131, circa 1936By Warren McArthur, Warren McArthur CorporationLocated in Camden, MEWarren McArthur aluminum vanity stool from the mid- 1930s. The stool is worn and has a separation crack on the inside edge of one of the floor tube. Early McArthur is made from weld...Category
Vintage 1930s American Bauhaus Stools
MaterialsAluminum
- Warren McArthur Desk ChairBy Warren McArthur Corporation, Warren McArthurLocated in Chicago, ILWarren McArthur Desk Chair, Aluminum frame with upholstrey. Reupholstered Seat height 20"Category
Vintage 1930s Art Deco Chairs
MaterialsAluminum
- Pair of Warren McArthur for Namco Lounge ChairsBy Namco, Warren McArthurLocated in Chicago, ILAluminum and leather lounges by Warren McArthur for Namco. Restored with spinney back leather.Category
Vintage 1930s Australian Art Deco Lounge Chairs
MaterialsAluminum
- Classic Pair of Art Deco Machine Age Aluminium Lounge Chairs by Warren McArthurBy Warren McArthurLocated in Buffalo, NYMatched pair of Art Deco. Machine Age aluminium lounge chairs by Warren McArthur, original unmolested condition, retains original cut mohair fabric upholstery as well as McArthur lab...Category
Vintage 1930s American Art Deco Lounge Chairs
MaterialsAluminum
- Pair of Armchair Warren McArthur Rare Model with Hidden AshtraysBy Warren McArthurLocated in Atlanta, GAA pair of metal armchairs designed by Warren McArthur (1885-1961) and made by Warren McArthur Corporation for Chrysler headquarter in Chicago b...Category
Vintage 1930s American Art Deco Armchairs
MaterialsAluminum
- Pair of Warren McArthur Pull-Up Chairs, 1930'sBy Warren McArthur, Warren McArthur CorporationLocated in Chicago, ILPair of Warren McArthur pull-up chairs, 1930's Aluminum tubular frame with back-slats. Manufactured in Rome, New York Decal underside. We reupholstered with new Iron Cloth, a polye...Category
Vintage 1930s American Industrial Chairs
MaterialsAluminum
- Warren McArthur Streamline Modern Aluminum Chair, Art Deco, 1930s, USABy Warren McArthur, Warren McArthur CorporationLocated in Brooklyn, NYWarren McArthur chair, Warren McArthur Corporation, aluminum, leather, copper, rubber, USA, 1930s. Measures: 33½ H × 17 W × 21 D in Provenance: Collection of Stuart Parr Private Collection Warren McArthur Jr. was an innovator in Machine Age/ Art Deco furniture design. McArthur moved from Chicago to Los Angeles in 1929 to pursue metal furniture manufacturing; . he founded the Warren McArthur Corporation there in 1930. His furniture designs while unique were true to the Machine Age aesthetic. Machine Age design emphasized sleek forms inspired by automobiles, locomotives and airplanes. These objects were symbols of progress and modernity to the American consumer and industrial designers began constructing furniture in streamlined designs from steel, chrome and aluminum. Prior to the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair, known as the “Century of Progress Exhibition.” The fair’s tagline, “See America Streamlined,” and the abundance of metal furniture and home goods exhibited finally presented the concept of utilizing metal designs in the typical American household. The Museum of Modern Art followed suit in subsequent years with exhibitions like "Machine Art," (1934), and "Bauhaus 1919-1928" (1938), further exposing the American public to this design style. The Warren McArthur Corporation moved manufacturing to Rome, New York in 1933, just as metal furniture was gaining popularity; the company’s products were sold out of a showroom in New York City on Park Avenue. As a manufacturer, McArthur filed numerous patent designs which he utilized in advertisements to exhibit the innovations he developed. The company also proudly printed patent numbers on furniture...Category
Vintage 1930s American Side Chairs
MaterialsAluminum