Seat for Bertoia chair only

Seat for Bertoia chair only

Art. RIC002

Designer Harry Bertoia

95.00 €
Tax included
Coating type
Color of leather Colore Selezionato: 20
Color of leather Colore Selezionato:
Quantity

in leather or linen of any category and color

The price refers to the full-grain leather version for the leather and to the stain-resistant fabric for the linen version

The cushion is not removable, it has a 2 cm high density 50 polyurethane foam interior

The cushion of the Bertoia chair has a central seam and is edged with the same leather or fabric,

The hook is provided with two automatic hooks sewn under the pillow

Designer Harry Bertoia

Best known as a sculptor and furniture designer, Harry Bertoia was born in San Lorenzo, Udine, Italy. In 1928 he began taking drawing classes in Italy before immigrating first to Canada, then to Detroit in 1930. He received a scholarship to the School of the Detroit Society of Arts and Crafts in 1936 and a year later was awarded a teaching scholarship at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. There he taught metalworking from 1937 to 1942 and then graphics for one year. In 1943 Bertoia moved to Los Angeles to work as a furniture designer. He also took welding classes at Santa Monica City College and in 1947 created his first welded sculptures. During this period Bertoia became an American citizen. His employer, Knoll Associates, introduced the Bertoia Collection of furniture in 1952. The following year he received his first commission for a large-scale sculpture for the General Motors Technical Center in Warren, Michigan. Bertoia subsequently resigned from Knoll Associates to concentrate on his sculpture. His distinguished work brought him other major commissions for the Massachussetts Institute of Technology Chapel, Lambert Airport in St. Louis, Dulles International Airport in Washington, D.C., and the Federal Reserve Bank in Richmond, Virginia. Beginning in the 1940s, Bertoia exhibited extensively. Among his many awards were the Gold Medal given by the Architectural League of New York (1955-56), the Fine Arts Medal from the Pennsylvania Association of the American Institute of Architects (1963), and an honorary doctorate from Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.

RIC002

Specific References

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