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Vintage Modernist Architectural Studio Crafted Side Chairs

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  • Vintage Studio Crafted Oak Side Chairs, Circa 1970
    Located in Chicago, IL
    Vintage studio crafted oak side chairs circa 1970s. These stunning chairs make a statement in any space of the house. Wear is consistent with age and we...
    Category

    Late 20th Century North American Side Chairs

    Materials

    Oak, Plywood

  • Arts & Crafts American Oak Side Chair, C.1920
    Located in San Francisco, CA
    Arts & Crafts American oak side chair, C.1920 Hand carved - Custom made - Leather upholstery Measures: 19" wide x 16" deep x 18" high at the seat x 39" high at the back Good...
    Category

    Early 20th Century American Arts and Crafts Side Chairs

    Materials

    Oak

  • Vintage Horn Side Chair
    Located in Coeur d'Alene, ID
    Vintage 24 horn side chair with original upholstery (could be redone0. The base of the chair is fashioned completely with horns as are the back and arms. The seat is of vintage cowhi...
    Category

    Antique Late 19th Century American Chairs

    Materials

    Horn

  • Modernist Side Chairs by L.O.V. Oosterbeek, the Netherlands, 1920s
    By L.O.V. Oosterbeek
    Located in Rotterdam, NL
    Rare pair of modernist side chairs by L.O.V. Oosterbeek, the Netherlands 1921. L.O.V. is an abbreviation of Labor Onia Vincit which means...
    Category

    Vintage 1920s Chairs

    Materials

    Oak

  • Lucite and Chrome Architectural Side Chairs Attributed to Charles Hollis Jones
    By Charles Hollis Jones
    Located in North Miami, FL
    These unusual square pair of lucite side chairs have high box arms with a slab of clear lucite as the back. Attributed to Charles Hollis Jones. They have a...
    Category

    Vintage 1970s American Modern Side Chairs

    Materials

    Chrome

  • Original Hand Carved and Blackened Reclaimed Oak Sculptural Accent or Side Chair
    By Rooms Studio
    Located in New York, NY
    This hand-carved and blackened reclaimed oak chair, designed by Rooms Studio (from their 2018 Wild Minimalism collection), is inspired by the legacy of traditional Georgian craftsmanship. The Sculptural Chair is meticulously handcrafted of ancient wood, and features a diamond shape cut-out on the top rail, which is curved gently, cradling the back, with a round seat and circular cross stretcher. About the Design Studio: Works of Rooms Studio refers to the sculptural forms and abundant materials in juxtaposition with the feminine instincts. Born and raised in Tbilisi, Georgia, the duo behind the Rooms, Nata Janberidze and Keti Toloraia, lean towards preserving the inherited craftsmanship techniques unique to the region. Massive wood and stone objects are hand-crafted using traditional techniques to create raw and symbolic forms often rooted in the designers' childhood memories. Growing up in a culturally diverse environment, where the two worlds - Western and Eastern collide, remarkably influenced their design language. Over the years, Rooms has created eight independent collections and collaborations equally memorable and representative of the duo's perpetual mission to bring life to omitted elements of a former life. Through their series of works, Janberidze and Toloraia try to examine the boundaries between the public and private. Experiencing adolescent years in the 90s - a significant decade of cultural and societal shifts - their work is a narrative of personal experiences of womanhood. By contrasting the new feminine monumental shapes with architectural brutality, Rooms challenges the status quo and also bridges the conventional and contemporary design with a confluence of female energy. The work of Rooms Studio has concerned itself with questions of nomenclature since the Tbilisi-based design atelier was co-founded by Nata Janberidze and Keti Toloraia in 2007. Take, for instance, the studio’s name: in adopting the basic unit of interior space as the title of their practice, Janberidze and Toloraia also emphasized the emotional force of interiority and inner life in determining their creative output. The studio’s largest U.S. exhibition to date, "Distant Symphony," expands upon this impulse to focus inward. The title is again a chief concern—some of the objects included here were designed during the global pandemic, under a regime of forced isolation that made the studio’s typically collective work process untenable. The pieces shown here are the results of Rooms’ search for a way forward. The first room, an antechamber of sorts, evokes the intimate quality of a private home. Shown here are trinkets and personal effects chosen by Janberidze and Toloraia for their emotive qualities; a low background noise emphasizes the climate of urban domesticity. The ensuing gallery space features highlights of Rooms’ recent design output. Here, the subtle scent of organic materials provides a sensory indication of the atelier’s interest in dichotomies: natural and man-made, personal and collective, local and cosmopolitan.   In light of the global circumstances, Janberidze and Toloraia felt it was especially important to pursue collaborative work. Rooms invited three artists—Shotiko Aptsiauri, Salome Chigalashvili and Mariana Chkonia—to conduct a dialogue and shared design process. As such, this exhibition is a kind of polyphonic meditation on a need for solitude and desire for companionship. The practice of polyphonic singing, essential to Georgian folk culture, is reinterpreted here as a design endeavor. Chigilashvili, working with unprocessed yarn, interpreted folk motifs by adapting embroidery to the scale of furniture with expansive stitches applied to painted boards...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Georgian Chairs

    Materials

    Oak, Reclaimed Wood, Wood

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