Gebruder Thonet Vienna - Loos Café Museum Chair | Salvioni
Preferiti Favourites
Careers

Suggested versions (3)

Loos Café Museum ChairPlywood Seat Loos Café Museum Chair

Price starting from
€ 1.027,00

Loos Café Museum ChairSeat in Woven Cane Loos Café Museum Chair

Price starting from
€ 1.094,00

Loos Café Museum ChairUpholstered Seat Loos Café Museum Chair

Price starting from
€ 1.120,00

Personalize your request

Frame
Select




Select


Select

Gebruder Thonet Vienna
All design history books begin with the same name: Thonet. In fact, thanks to the research made by the German cabinet maker Michael Thonet on the bending of wood, the industrial production of furniture began. In 1842, Thonet was invited by Chancellor Metternich himself to continue his activity in Vienna, and it was precisely in the capital of the Hapsburg Empire that he founded the Gebrüder Thonet Vienna (GTV) involving his five sons. The company left an indelible mark and the Gebrüder Thonet Vienna chairs went to connote the style of an era, selling millions of pieces all over the world thanks to a cutting-edge distribution network.Read more

Designed by

Adolf Loos

Adolf Loos
Adolf Loos (1870-1933), Austrian architect of the early 1900s, was one of the first protagonists of the radical renewal of the concept of architecture that crossed Western culture in those years. His essay "Ornaments and Crime" (1908) paved the way for Modernism, pugnaciously advocating the abandonment of any decorative ambitions to favor above all the practical and utilitarian function of buildings. An idea of architecture that Loos consistently carried forward also in his design practice, strongly influenced by his youthful trips to the United States during which he had come into contact with the dry and chaste style of the Calvinist communities of the Shakers. Back in Vienna he launched into a bitter controversy with the architects of the Secession group, such as Otto Wagner and Josef Hoffamann, to whom he had initially adhered but from which he had soon detached himself in opposition to their style which he considered an expression of past. Instead, he was in friendly relations with the circles of the European artistic avant-garde, so much so that in the 1920s he designed the Parisian home of the surrealist Tristan Tzara. Other well-known projects of his are the Café Museum in Vienna (1899), Villa Kramer in Montreux (1903-06) and the Looshaus (1909-11), also in Vienna, a city for which he briefly held the role of chief architect in the difficult period following the First World War. A chair designed by him is now re-proposed in the Gebrüder Thonet Vienna catalog, while many of his lamps are reissued by the Austrian lighting brand Woka. Read more