B33 by the Thonet Company. The chair was first produced by Hungarian American architect and furniture designer Marcel Breuer. Because Breuer did not copyright the design, it led to mass production of the chair without the acknowledgment of the rightful designer.
“Sembra a prima vista strano che esperienze da gran tempo passate debbano agire cosí intensamente, e che i ricordi di esse non soggiacciano al logoramento cui pure vediamo sottostare tutti i nostri ricordi.”
“Robe Zippée" d'Azzedine Alaïa (2003) présentée devant la "Salle à Manger" de Marcel Breuer (1926) dans le parcours mode "La Traversée des Apparences" parmi les collections permanentes du Centre Pompidou , mars 2024.
Library Living Room in Chicago
Example of a mid-sized minimalist open concept cork floor living room library design with white walls, no fireplace and no tv
Marcel Breuer hotel in New Haven CT formerly the Pirelli Tire Building a fine example of Brutalist architecture opened in 1970 www.stevenwmiller.com #stevenmiller #art #architecture #breuer #love #ct #newhaven #strong #brutalist #stevenmillerart https://www.instagram.com/p/Cj0IubbOs3w/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Bauhaus was a school that had a great influence on modern art and architecture and is today more relevant than ever as a precursor to functionalism. Some of the world's most famous chairs were designed during the Bauhaus era by Mart Stam, Marcel Breuer and Mies Van der Rohe who developed chair models with a frame in steel tubes that became some of the most iconic products of the entire Bauhaus era.