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Joe Colombo Set of Six Universale Green Chairs by Kartell, 1960s

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  • Vico Magistretti Set of Six Black Carimate Chairs by Cassina 1960s
    By Cassina, Vico Magistretti
    Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
    Set of six Carimate chairs with structure in black lacquered beech wood and woven straw seat, designed by Vico Magistretti and produced by Cassina in the 1960s. The Carimate chair ...
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    Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chairs

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  • Vico Magistretti Set of Twelve Black Carimate Chairs by Cassina 1960s
    By Vico Magistretti, Cassina
    Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
    Set of twelve Carimate chairs with structure in black lacquered beech wood and woven straw seat, designed by Vico Magistretti and produced by Cassina in the 1960s. The Carimate cha...
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    Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chairs

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  • Vittorio Introini Set of Four Longobarda Dining Chairs by Saporiti 1960s Italy
    By Vittorio Introini, Saporiti
    Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
    Set of four Longobarda chairs with chromed metal legs, seat, and back upholstered with blue shade fabric. The Longobarda chair was designed by Vittorio Introini and manufactured by ...
    Category

    Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chairs

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    Metal

  • Afra & Tobia Scarpa Set of Four 121 Chairs by Cassina 1960s Italy
    By Afra & Tobia Scarpa, Cassina
    Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
    From 1963 to 1966 the architects Afra and Tobia Scarpa collaborated with the Italian company Cassina, designing a series of furniture characterized by the use of solid wood, the stud...
    Category

    Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chairs

    Materials

    Ash, Plywood

  • Mario Botta Set of Six 605 Quinta Chairs in Black Lacquered Steel by Alias 1980
    By Mario Botta, Alias
    Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
    Set of six 605 Quinta chairs with a black steel rod frame seat and back in bent perforated sheet metal. Designed by Mario Botta for Alias in 1985 (This chair is no longer in production). The Quinta chair it's an architecture you can sit on, this design clearly shows the inspiration of iconic designer as Le Corbusier, Louis Kahn, and Carlo Scarpa, an exemplary of this iconic chair is also exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art. Mario Botta was born in 1943 in Mendrisio. After working as an apprentice draughtsman for the Lugano-based architect Tita Carloni, he moved first to Milan and then to Venice, where he enrolled at the department of Architecture at the IUAV. He completed his degree in 1969 with a thesis tutored by Carlo Scarpa – after having met Le Corbusier and Louis Kahn, who were later to be sources of inspiration – and returned to Switzerland to open his own professional firm, which at the time dealt mainly with detached family private homes. These included the villas in Riva San Vitale (1971-1973), Ligornetto (1975-1976) and Morbio Superiore (1982-1983), in which Botta treated the theme of the home as a refuge, which protects and reassures its inhabitants. These were buildings with a character that was ironic and, in a certain sense, monumental, obtained for example (in the case of Morbio) through rigorous symmetrical compositions and a particular use of raw concrete blocks set in a linear pattern and alternated with strips of silvered brick which, on the contrary, were set at 45 degrees. Partially dug into the hillside, the villa was also characterised by a theme which was particularly dear to Botta and which had already been explored in Riva San Vitale; the net distinction between solids and voids, the latter appearing to have been dug out of the building. Between 1980 and 1990, Botta associated with artists and intellectuals from all walks of life and took numerous long trips abroad. Together with Gabriele Basilico and Edoardo Sanguinetti, he published “La Casa Rotonda”, and he became friends with Max Huber, Nicki de Saint Phalle, Dante Isella, Harld Szeemann, Robert Frank and Alberto Flammer. In 1986, the MoMA in New York dedicated a solo exhibition to his work, and the Swiss architect received his first contracts for public buildings and from abroad, debuting with the Cultural Centre in Chambéry (1984-1987). In Japan, on a challenging triangular lot of only one hundred and sixty square metres, a space which remained from the opening of a new highway, Botta built a small building which, with its clarity and strength of image, attempted to stand out in the midst of the chaos that surrounded it, thanks to a thick masonry curtain raised on the main façade, in which slabs of grey marble are crossed with horizontal fissures which erode the angles and cancel the perception of the number of floors which make up the museum. The church of Mongo, on the other hand, was the first step in a long series of places of worship, including designs for the churches of Pordenone (1987-1992) and Sartiana (1987-1995), for the cathedral of Evry (1988-1995), for the basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli on Mont Tamaro (1990-1996, for the Giovanni XXII church in Seriate (1994-2000) and for the Cymbalista synagogue in Tel Aviv (1996-1998). In each of these, light plays a predominant role as a prime generator of space and a measure for the definition of time that passes with the various phases of the day, the months and the seasons. Light is, however, the main symbolic element, representing through its variations the uneasiness of humankind in the face of divine perfection. In this same period, the scheduling for the construction of a new School of Architecture, the Mendrisio Academy, took place. Inaugurated in 1996, it offered an alternative approach to teaching in contrast to the Swiss University system, in which an important role is played by humanistic subjects and by a copious group of well-known international professors: from Rykwert to Benevolo, Burkhart, Campos Baeza, Dal Co, Frampton, Mendes da Rocha...
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    Vintage 1980s Italian Post-Modern Chairs

    Materials

    Steel, Sheet Metal

  • Giotto Stoppino Set of Six White Alessia Chairs by Driade 1970s Italy
    By Driade, Giotto Stoppino
    Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
    Set of six Alessia chairs with legs in tubular chromed metal and seats in white ABS, designed by Giotto Stoppino and manufactured by Driade in the 1970s. (Manufacturer's brand visi...
    Category

    Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chairs

    Materials

    Metal

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    A Colombo classic! It's safe to say these are making a comeback in modern interiors today and its sensibility can match well with a wide range of materialities. The design is also it...
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  • 4867 Universale Chair by Joe Colombo for Kartell, 1970s
    By Joe Colombo
    Located in Princeton Junction, NJ
    4867 Universale Chair by Joe Colombo for Kartell, 1970s good condition color: green
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  • Italian modern white plastic 860 Universale Chairs, Joe Colombo, Kartell, 1970s
    By Joe Colombo, Kartell
    Located in MIlano, IT
    Italian modern white plastic 860 Universale Chairs, Joe Colombo, Kartell, 1970s. Set consisting of four model 860 chairs, also known as Universale Chair, in cream white ABS plastic. ...
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  • Joe Colombo Universale Plastic Chair for Kartell White Italy Vintage Space Age
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    Located in Alsdorf, NW
    Nice set of two chairs by Joe Columbo. Manufactured by Kartell. The Universale chair is one of the first molded plastic chairs created. The ch...
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  • Original Joe Colombo Universale Chair by Beylerian LTD for Kartell, Italy, 1960s
    By Kartell, Joe Colombo, Beylerian LTD
    Located in Miami, FL
    Original Universale chair rendered in polycarbonate designed by Joe Colombo for Kartell, Italy, and manufactured by Beylerian LTD, 1960s.
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  • Model 4867 chairs by Joe Colombo for Kartell, 1970S, set of 2
    By Kartell, Joe Colombo
    Located in Lasne, BE
    Red chairs by Joe Colombo. Model 4867. Stamped below the chairs. Wear due to time and the age of the chairs.
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