Wassily® Chair Bauhaus 100th Anniversary – Limited Edition

Designed by Marcel Breuer, 1925

To celebrate the anniversary of the Bauhaus, where Marcel Breuer was first a student and then a teacher, Knoll focuses on the iconic collections, creating a Bauhaus Limited Edition of the legendary Wassily® Chair. This version will be produced just in 500 pieces and will be offered with a sophisticated black finishing of the metal structure, certified and numbered to commemorate the centennial of the movement and the close ties with Knoll and the foundations of its inimitable design approach.

More than nine decades since its debut, the Wassily Chair has not lost any of its modernity and elegance: it is a timeless classic in the history of design.

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Wassily® Chair Bauhaus 100th Anniversary – Limited Edition
  • Wassily® Chair Bauhaus 100th Anniversary – Limited Edition Designed by Marcel Breuer, 1925
  • Wassily® Chair Bauhaus 100th Anniversary – Limited Edition Designed by Marcel Breuer, 1925

Details

FEATURES

A classic KnollStudio design, produced to Breuer's original specifications.
The KnollStudio logo and the signature of Breuer, Marcel are stamped into the base of the chairs.

 

CONSTRUCTION

Frame is seamless tubular steel with a polished chrome finish.

 

FINISHES

Thick cowhide leather upholstery option is available in black or white colours
Frame is in black chrome.

Note: Only 500 examples of the Wassily Limited Edition chair have been produced, all with a serial number and special stamp on the structure to mark the 100th anniversary of Bauhaus. The Armchair is provided with a certificate of authenticity.

 

AWARDS

The Museum of Modern Art Award, 1968.
Recognition as "Work of Art" Germany, 1982.

Dimensions

 
WASSILY CHAIR – LIMITED EDITION

79cm W x 69cm D x 73cm H, with a seat height of 42cm.


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Product Story image

In an interview with a Knoll historian, Marcel Breuer described how he came to begin experimenting with bent tubular steel while at the Bauhaus:

“At that time I was rather idealistic. 23 years old. I made friends with a young architect, and I bought my first bicycle. I learned to ride the bicycle and talked to this young fellow and told him that the bicycle seems to be a perfect production because it hasn’t changed in the last twenty, thirty years. It is still the original bicycle form. He said, “Did you ever see how they make those parts? How they bend those handlebars? You would be interested because they bend those steel tubes like macaroni.”

"This somehow remained in my mind, and I started to think about steel tubes which are bent into frames—probably that is the material you could use for an elastic and transparent chair. Typically, I was very much engaged with the transparency of the form.

"That is how the first chair was made…I realised that the bending had to go further. It should only be bent with no points of welding on it so it could also be chromed in parts and put together. That is how the first Wassily was born. I was myself somewhat afraid of criticism. I didn’t tell anyone I was doing these experiments actually. [Wassily] Kandinsky, who came by chance to my studio when the first chair was brought in, said, “What’s this?” He was very interested and then the Bauhaus got very interested in it. A year later, I had furnished the whole Bauhaus with this furniture.”

Designer image

Protégé of Bauhaus founder, Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer embodied many of the School's distinctive concepts and was and one of the School's most famous students. He returned shortly thereafter to teach carpentry from 1925 to 1928, and during this time designed his tubular-steel furniture collection: functional, simple and distinctly modern. His attention drifted towards architecture, and after practicing privately, he worked as a professor at Harvard's School of Design under Gropius. Breuer was also honoured as the first architect to be the sole artist of an exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.