A work from the early years of the Bauhaus, presumed lost for the past 80 years, has been recovered in 2004: the 'African Chair', created by Marcel Breuer and Gunta Stölzl. Made of painted wood with a colorful textile weave, this chair embodies the spirit of the early Bauhaus like no other object. The seat and back of the chair employ a woven textile.
Gunta Stölzl in a letter to H.M. Wingler, 07.01.1964:
"That was the first time we worked together. I produced the fabric. I threaded and tautened the warp directly through the holes in the frame and wove the texture onto the chair itself... the forms were freely invented and without repetitions..."
African Chair on Bauhaus Online
In the seat and back of the second chair, Stölzl employed the taut strips of woven upholstery which were to characterize so much of Breuer’s later work and which he developed together with Gunta Stölzl and her weaving workshop.
The chair on Bauhaus Online
Chair by Marcel Breuer in collaboration with Gunta Stölzl
Pear, polished black
Seat and back of plaited woolen straps
1921
75.5x49x49 cm (HxWxD)
Kunstsammlungen zu Weimar, Weimar
Chair by Marcel Breuer in collaboration with Gunta Stölzl
Pear, polished black
Seat and back of plaited woolen straps
1921
75.5x49x49 cm (HxWxD)
Kunstsammlungen zu Weimar, Weimar
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