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  2. Tugendhat chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tugendhat_chair

    Like the Barcelona chair, the Tugendhat chair has a large padded leather seat and back, supported by leather straps mounted on a steel frame and legs. However, like one variant of the Brno chair, the frame is flat solid steel, formed under into a C-shape under the seat to create a cantilever. Versions exist with or without leather-padded steel ...

  3. Cantilever chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantilever_chair

    B55 Cantilever chair by Marcel Breuer. A cantilever chair is a chair whose seating and framework are not supported by the typical arrangement of 4 legs, but instead is held erect and aloft by a single leg or legs that are attached to one end of a chair's seat and bent in an L shape, thus also serving as the chair's supporting base.

  4. List of chairs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_chairs

    Dining chair, designed to be used at a dining table; typically, dining chairs are part of a dining set, where the chairs and table feature similar or complementary designs. The oldest known depiction of dining chairs is a seventh-century BCE bas-relief of an Assyrian king and queen on very high chairs. [20]

  5. Brno chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brno_chair

    The Brno chair (model number MR50) is a modernist cantilever chair designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Lilly Reich in 1929-1930 for the bedroom of the Tugendhat House in Brno, Czech Republic. The design was based on similar chairs created by Mies van der Rohe working with Lilly Reich , such as the MR20 chair with wicker seat from 1927; all ...

  6. Wassily Chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wassily_Chair

    The Wassily Chair, also known as the Model B3 chair, was designed by Marcel Breuer in 1925–1926 while he was the head of the cabinet-making workshop at the Bauhaus, in Dessau, Germany. Despite popular belief, the chair was not designed specifically for the non-objective painter Wassily Kandinsky , who was on the Bauhaus faculty at the same time.

  7. Cesca chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cesca_Chair

    The three official manufacturers of the chair were Thonet (from 1927), Gavina (1950s), and Knoll (1960s). [6] In 1928, the Cesca chair was the first such tubular-steel-frame, caned-seat chair to be mass-produced. [7] It was among the ten most common such chairs. One of the original ones from that time sits in the Museum of Modern Art in ...