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Knoll International Wassily Chair Leather Armchair Black 6 Chair

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  • Knoll International Wassily Chair by Marcel Breuer Black Leather
    By Marcel Breuer, Knoll
    Located in Munich, Bavaria
    This Wassily chair, in chromed tubular steel and black leather, was designed by Marcel Breuer and produced by Knoll International. Knoll International production with the Marcel Breu...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century Italian Bauhaus Lounge Chairs

    Materials

    Stainless Steel, Chrome

  • Knoll International Wassily Chair by Marcel Breuer Black Leather
    By Knoll, Marcel Breuer
    Located in Munich, Bavaria
    This Wassily chair, in chromed tubular steel and black leather, was designed by Marcel Breuer and produced by Knoll International. Knoll International production with the Marcel Breu...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century Italian Bauhaus Lounge Chairs

    Materials

    Chrome, Stainless Steel

  • Knoll International Wassily Chair Design by Marcel Breuer Brown Saddle Leather
    By Knoll, Marcel Breuer
    Located in Munich, Bavaria
    This Wassily chair, in chromed tubular steel and brown leather, was designed by Marcel Breuer and produced by Knoll International. Knoll International production with the Wassily st...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century Italian Bauhaus Lounge Chairs

    Materials

    Chrome

  • Newly Upholstered Knoll International Black Leather Custom Sofa, Germany, 1950s
    By Knoll
    Located in Berlin, DE
    Newly upholstered Knoll International custom sofa in sorensen leather. Germany, 1950s.  
    Category

    Vintage 1950s German Mid-Century Modern Sofas

    Materials

    Metal

  • Knoll International Chair by Florence Knoll Model 67 C in Linen
    By Knoll, Florence Knoll
    Located in Köln, NRW
    Florence Knoll designed sofas, armchairs, tables and sideboards in a minimalist style in the Bauhaus tradition. An example of this is the armchair model 67 C. The frame made of ch...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century German Sofas

    Materials

    Metal, Steel

  • Pristine Florence Knoll Sofa for Knoll International
    By Knoll, Florence Knoll
    Located in Los Angeles, CA
    Pristine Florence Knoll Sofa for Knoll International. Upholstered in gorgeous Sina Pearson fabric. Florence Knoll was a pioneering designer and entrepreneur who created the modern look and feel of America’s postwar corporate office with sleek furniture, artistic textiles and an uncluttered, free-flowing workplace environment. To connoisseurs of Modernism, the mid-20th-century designs of Florence Knoll, were — and still are — the essence of the genre’s clean, functional forms. Transcending design fads, they are still influential, still contemporary, still common in offices, homes and public spaces, still found in dealers’ showrooms and represented in museum collections. Ms. Knoll learned her art at the side of Modernist masters. She was a protégé of the German-American architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Eliel Saarinen, the Finnish architect and teacher and the father of the architect Eero Saarinen. And she worked with the renowned Bauhaus architects Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer. Throughout her career, influenced by the German Bauhaus school of design, she promoted the Modernist merger of architecture, art and utility in her furnishings and interiors, especially — although not exclusively — for offices. In the 1940s, she married and became a business partner of the German-born furniture maker Hans Knoll, and over 20 years she was instrumental in building Knoll Associates into the largest and most prestigious high-end design firm of its kind, with 35 showrooms in the United States and around the world. While her husband handled business affairs, Ms. Knoll was the design force of Knoll Associates. It grew to become the leading innovator of modern interiors and furnishings in the 1950s and ’60s, transforming the CBS, Seagram and Look magazine headquarters in Manhattan, the H. J. Heinz headquarters in Pittsburgh and properties across the United States, Europe, Asia and South America, including American embassies. Her “total design” favored open work spaces over private offices, and furniture grouped for informal discussions. It integrated lighting, vibrant colors, acoustical fabrics, chairs molded like tulip petals, sofas and desks with chrome legs...
    Category

    Early 2000s American Modern Sofas

    Materials

    Stainless Steel

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