Chairs

Connected Sites: 7

WHS closely linked to or identified with to a specific/iconic chair design.

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Connected Sites

City of Bath
City of Bath
United Kingdom
Inscribed: 1987
3.57
562
13
The “Bath Chair” Designed In The 18th C Particularly For Disabled Persons.
See En.Wikipedia.Org
Tugendhat Villa
Inscribed: 2001
2.98
197
15
The “Tugendhat Chair” Designed In 1929 For The Villa.
See En.Wikipedia.Org
Rietveld Schröderhuis
Inscribed: 2000
3.04
273
12
The “Red And Blue Chair” Designed By Gerrit Rietveld In 1917 And Was Orogonally “Uncoloured”. In 1923 It Was Painted “Entirely Black With Areas Of Primary Colors Attributed To De Stijl Movement. The Effect Of This Color Scheme Made The Chair Seem To Almost Disappear Against The Black Walls And Floor Of The Rietveld Schröder House, Where It Was Later Placed” (Wiki).
See En.Wikipedia.Org
Santa Cruz de Mompox
Inscribed: 1995
2.72
37
4
The “Mompox Rocking Chair”.
Luis Barragán House and Studio
Inscribed: 2004
2.77
125
10
Barragan Is "Famous" For His Design Of A Type Of Campeche Chair - Known As A Butaca. (At Least) A Couple Are In The House And The Vitra Foundation Sells Full Size And Miniature Versions.
See Donshoemaker.Com
Nice
Nice
France
Inscribed: 2021
2.79
400
5
The Blue Chair Or "Chaise Bleue" Is A Form Of Urban Furniture Typical Of The Promenade Des Anglais And Has Become A Symbol Of The City Of Nice.
See Fr.Wikipedia.Org
Bauhaus Sites
Inscribed: 1996
2.76
302
14
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. Kandinsky Had Admired The Completed Design, And Breuer Fabricated A Duplicate For Kandinsky's Personal Quarters [I.E., Masters Houses]. (Wiki)
See En.Wikipedia.Org