Designer | Ron Arad |
---|---|
Date | 1981 (United Kingdom) |
Materials | Steel frame, leather car seat |
Style / tradition | Postmodernist |
Sold by | Vitra (Switzerland) |
Height | 78 cm (31 in) |
Width | 69 cm (27 in) |
Depth | 92 cm (36 in) |
The Rover chair is the first piece of furniture designed by industrial designer Ron Arad. It was made in 1981 as a fusion of two readymades and launched Arad's career. The chair is a postmodernist design, combining a car seat with a structural tubing frame.
Arad had left his employment with a firm of architects, [1] and obtained the parts to make the chair from a scrapyard in Chalk Farm, London. [1] [2] The readymade [3] chair was the first piece of furniture he produced. [4] [5]
The red [6] [7] leather seat is from a Rover P6 [8] [9] and is housed in a black [10] painted curved steel frame made from a Kee Klamp milking stall. [1] [6] [8] Later exhibited pieces had epoxy lacquered frames. [11] The frame provides both feet and arm rests. [12]
The Rover P6 is sometimes known as the 2000. Some reports of the chair refer to it being made using seats from the 200, [2] [13] P5 [14] or 90. [15]
Furniture maker Joe Hall visited Arad's Covent Garden shop in the mid-1980s and then collaborated with him to make further chairs. Hall scoured the country's scrapyards for P6 seats, which cost £5–15 each and were in excellent condition. [8]
The chairs sold for £99 each in 1981, [2] about three times the production cost. [1] Original chairs made by Arad's One Off company [9] have been auctioned by Christie's, [16] [17] Bonhams, [18] [19] Bonhams & Butterfield [15] and Göteborgs Auktionsverk. [20] [21] Hundreds have been produced since 1981, fetching thousands of pounds at auctions at the turn of the century. [2] [8] [22] The success of the chair, which has become an icon, [23] launched Arad's career. [6] [11] [24] [25]
The chairs were produced by One Off until 1989, and in 2008 were being produced by Vitra in two models. [12] A two-seater version was auctioned in 2011. [20] [21]
Fashion designer Jean Paul Gaultier bought six chairs [1] [2] in 1981. They also attracted the attention of furniture manufacturer Vitra. [11] The chair is recognised as a postmodernist design. [26]
A presenter of BBC Television's Top Gear sat on such a chair from 1988. [2] The chair also featured in a television advertisement for an unrelated product. [27] Arad's own children were breast-fed on the chair. [24]
The chair has formed part of various exhibitions, including those at London's Design Museum, [13] Barbican Art Gallery, [10] Timothy Taylor Gallery, [28] Paris's Centre Pompidou [11] [29] and New York's Museum of Modern Art. [6] [25]
Philippe Starck is a French industrial architect and designer known for his wide range of designs, including interior design, architecture, household objects, furniture, boats and other vehicles. His most popular pieces were made in the 1980s and the 1990s.
Verner Panton is considered one of Denmark's most influential 20th-century furniture and interior designers. During his career, he created innovative and futuristic designs in a variety of materials, especially plastics, and in vibrant and exotic colors. His style was very "1960s" but regained popularity at the end of the 20th century. As of 2004, Panton's best-known furniture models are still in production.
The Eames Lounge Chair and Ottoman is a lounge chair and ottoman manufactured and sold by American furniture company Herman Miller. Introduced in 1956, the Eames Lounge Chair was designed by Charles and Ray Eames and is made of molded plywood and leather. It was the first chair the Eameses designed for the high-end market. The Eames Lounge Chair and Ottoman are part of the permanent collection of New York's Museum of Modern Art.
Mario Bellini is an Italian architect and designer. After graduating from the Polytechnic University of Milan in 1959, Bellini pursued a career as an architect, exhibition designer, product designer, and furniture designer during the Italian economic boom of the late 20th century. Bellini has received several accolades in a variety of design fields, including eight Compasso d'Oro awards and the Gold Medal for Lifetime Achievement by the Triennale di Milano. In 2019, the Italian President of the Chamber of Deputies, Roberto Fico, awarded Bellini a career medal in recognition of his contributions to Italian architecture and design.
Bonhams is a privately owned international auction house and one of the world's oldest and largest auctioneers of fine art and antiques. It was formed by the merger in November 2001 of Bonhams & Brooks and Phillips Son & Neale. This brought together two of the four surviving Georgian auction houses in London, Bonhams having been founded in 1793, and Phillips in 1796 by Harry Phillips, formerly a senior clerk to James Christie.
The Sacco chair, also known as a bean bag chair,beanbag chair, or simply a beanbag, is a large fabric bag filled with polystyrene beans. It was designed by Piero Gatti, Cesare Paolini and Franco Teodoro in 1968. "Sacco" is Italian for "bag" or "sack". The product is an example of an anatomic chair as the shape of the object is set by the user.
Jasper Morrison is an English product and furniture designer. He is known for the refinement and apparent simplicity of his designs. In a rare interview with the designer, he is quoted as saying: "Objects should never shout."
Shiro Kuramata is one of Japan's most important designers of the 20th century.
Ross Lovegrove is a Welsh artist and industrial designer.
The Campana Brothers, consisting of Humberto Campana and Fernando Campana (1961–2022), are Brazilian furniture designers.
Vitra is a Swiss family-owned furniture company headquartered in Birsfelden, Switzerland. It manufactures the works of many furniture designers. Vitra is also known for the works of notable architects that make up its premises in Weil am Rhein, Germany, in particular the Vitra Design Museum.
Ron Arad, is a British-Israeli industrial designer, artist, and architectural designer.
Néotù was a contemporary furniture gallery founded in 1984 in Paris.
Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec are brothers noted for their design work, which has been featured in publications and museums globally — and spans a wide range from tables and chairs to tableware, rugs, textile walls, office furniture, ceramics, art objects and urban projects.
The Bofinger Chair, also named BA 1171, was designed by architect and designer Helmut Bätzner in 1964. In close co-operation with Bofinger company, situated in Ilsfeld in Baden-Württemberg/Germany, under owner and managing director Rudolf Baresel-Bofinger, the Bofinger stacking chair was developed into the first one-piece plastic chair worldwide in fibreglass- reinforced polyester to be mass-produced in one single pressing process over a steel mould. The material was dyed all way through before being processed and available in a range of colours including white, yellow, black, red, blue, green, brown and orange. In a long trial series the characteristic shape of the chair was found in regard to seating shape, maximum stability by smallest quantity of material used, required elasticity, stacking capability, and industrial mass-production. The pressing process in the heated steel mould with a weight of approximately 11 tons lasted under five minutes and required as finishing treatment only simple scraping round the edges to remove excess polyester.
Gufram is an Italian furniture manufacturer known for avant-garde, conceptual, witty, and Pop-art influenced designs; the unconventional use of industrial materials; collaborations with well known architects and designers; and the contribution its products made to the aesthetics of the 1960s Radical period of Italian design.
Joris Hendricus Laarman is a Dutch designer, artist, furniture maker, and entrepreneur best known for his experimental designs inspired by emerging technologies. Laarman's projects are a blend of technology, art and design, with a focus on the potential of 3D printing. Major projects include 3D-printed stainless-steel bridge in Amsterdam, which showcases the potential for creating adaptive, lightweight, and uniquely designed structures using 3D printing. Laarman has also explored furniture design, including the 'Bone' series which used 3D-optimization software to achieve optimal construction. The designer's work often evokes a futuristic feel while nodding to historical art movements, exemplified by pieces like his "Digital Matter" series. When Laarman speaks about his work he discussed the implications and responsibilities that come with breakthrough technologies.
Konstantin Grcic, born 1965, is a German industrial designer known for his design of furniture and household products, some of which have been featured in design shows and museums. His design language is characterized by the use of geometric shapes and unexpected angles.
Andrés Reisinger is an Argentinian visual artist and designer based between Madrid and Barcelona, Spain. He is the founder of Reisinger Studio, a multidisciplinary design studio with locations in Madrid as well as Barcelona. Reisinger is widely known for industrial design, craft, interior design and conceptual art.
{{cite news}}
: Check |url=
value (help)