| Charles Le Corbusier "reproduced to the style of the original designer" Grande Comfort Arm Chair
The Le Corbusier 'Grande Comfort suite' is the epitome of French modern classic design. It was created for the 1929 Salon d'Automne in Paris. The Grande Comfort has the same style as the Grande the only difference being is the sumptous down and foam mix cushions making this the most comfortable sofa our of the Le Corbusier range.
Materials: Semi-aniline dyed top grain leather upholstery. Polished chrome frame. Dimensions: Width: 104cm * Depth: 78cm * Height: 78cm

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(1887-1965) Swiss born architect, theorist and designer Le Corbusier worked and wrote with a unique vision, energy and clarity that made him one of the most influential figures shaping the international style during the early 1900s. Born Charles Edouard Jeanneret, he rechristened himself Le Corbusier in Paris in 1920, around the time he started his journal L'Esprit Nouveau. An active member of the Parisian art scene and co-founder of the Congrès Internationaux d'Architecture Moderne (CIAM), he championed a minimalist modernism built around the idea of the home as a "machine for living." In 1928 he began creating furnishings for his buildings as part of a collaboration with Pierre Jeanneret and Charlotte Perriand. The three created a series of tubular steel furniture that they exhibited at the 1929 Salon d'Automne in Paris and from which emerged some of the most lasting icons of the international style. The furniture, entitled as a group, "Equipment for Living," was designed in rich leather or cowhide upholstery and featured the swivel chair, the armchair and the chaise longue, which Le Corbusier referred to as the "relaxing machine."
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