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Armchair LC2, Lounger LC4 by Le Corbusier and Table by Eileen Gray

Armchair LC2, Lounger LC4 by Le Corbusier and Table by Eileen Gray
Armchair + Lounger upholstered in black leather. With chromed frame. Chromed cocktail table with glass top, adjustable height
Product-id.:SO-LC2+LC4+EG777-1
Delivery time:

leather quality color:



 
incl. tax (20%)
 
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Special Offer Price only for awhile - you save 369,40 Euro!


1 Armchair LC2 by Le Corbusier, 1 Lounger Chaiseloungue LC4 by Le Corbusier & Table by Eileen Gray 

Armchair an lounger upholstered in black leather. With chromed frame.

Version with feather in the seat-cushion.
 


Measurement Lounger:  L. 56 cm, H. 73 cm, P.  160 cm
cbm: 0,60
Measurement Armchair: L. 76 cm, H. 67 cm, P.  70 cm
cbm: 0,50


Cocktail Table by Eileen Gray

Chromed cocktail table with glass top, adjustable height

Measurement:   L. 51 cm, H. 62-100 cm, P. 51 cm
cbm: 0,20


                            


All prices include shipping charges from Italy to your country.
As of orders between 1.500,- and 2.000,- Euro (depending on your country), otherwise, the shipping charge is between 12 and 20 % plus basis charges.
- the entire cost of your selection will be indicated after you complete your order.

Italy's Top Bauhaus Classics brands directly from the manufacturer - Made in Italy                           
                                                                 

 

  
 
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 Arnchair LC2, Barcelona Chair, Louger by Eames
 Armchair and Sofa LC2, Lounger LC4, Tubelight



Leather color samples
We would be happy to send you various leather samples in black on request free of charge.
Please send us a mail to sample@classicdesign24.com

Please note: these colors are not binding.
Because display screen settings vary, color differences may occur in the presentation.

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 Leather standard black



Gallery

Help us to enlarge our/your picture gallery and send us pictures showing your Bauhaus furnitures, which you bought at our shop.
By publishing of your pictures, you will get a coupon for your next shopping at classic-design24.com



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 Le Corbusier 1887 - 1965
Architect and artist, born in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland. He left school at age 13 to learn the trade of engraving watch faces. Encouraged by a local art teacher he taught himself architecture, travelling throughout Europe to observe architectural styles.
Settling in Paris in 1917, he met Ozenfant, who introduced him to Purism, and with whom he collaborated in writing several articles under his pseudonym (the name of a relative on his father's side). He developed a theory of the interrelation between modern machine forms and architectural techniques, and his first building, based on the technique of the Modulor (a system using units whose proportions were those of the human figure), was the Unité d'habitation (xliving unitx), Marseille (1945-50). Some of his buildings are raised on stilts or piloti, an innovation he first used in the Swiss
Pavilion at the Cité Universitaire at Paris. His main interest was large urban projects and city-planning, and although many of his designs were rejected, they influenced other architects throughout the world. Other examples of his work are Chandigarh, the new capital of the Punjab; the Swiss Dormitory in the Cité Universitaire in Paris; and the Exposition Pavilion in Zürich.


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 Eileen Gray
Architect and Designer

Born in Ireland and from an affluent and artistic family background, Eileen Gray studied at the Slade School of Fine Arts (1898).
In 1902, she moved to France and studied drawing at the Académies Colarossi and Julian, Paris. Later, she trained in the art of lacquer with the Japanese craftsman, Sougawara. She spent much of World War I in London and only returned to Paris in 1918. Prior to, she had worked solely as a furniture designer; however, in that year she began to work on interior design.
In 1922, she opened the Galerie Jean Désert as a showcase for her own work. The same year she also came into contact with the De Stijl movement.
From 1926 onwards, she worked as an architect and exhibited several architectural projects in Le Corbusier's Pavillon des Temps Nouveaux at the 1937 Paris Exhibition.
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