chaise lounge chair lc4

chaise lounge chair lc4

chaise lounge chair kohls

Chaise Lounge Chair Lc4

CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE




The page you were looking for could not be found. If you followed a link on this site to get here, please contact the administrator so it can be corrected. Real Estate Sales TrendsOrder Online, or Call Free On (8am – 8pm Mon – Sat, 10am – 8pm Sun)Once you sit your body in the Le Corbusier Chaise Longue (LC4), you may never want to get up again. Because the padded leather and exposed metal LC4 was designed with a very specific purpose – to “serve” our limbs by providing the ultimate in comfort and good design. Or, in his own words, “The human-limb object is a docile servant. A good servant is discreet and self-effacing in order to leave his master free”. Watch our Le Corbusier Chaise Longue Video. Buying OptionsAdd to Basket If you’re looking for a material or finish that isn’t listed here, don’t despair. , and we’ll create a bespoke order to suit your exact requirements. Black Full Aniline Italian Leather In stock, next day delivery available.




Black, white and brown pony skin Clearly, Le Corbusier had some very strong ideas about design. But it’s also clear he succeeded in this goal with the LC4, as it remains the best known and most successful of his many well-known furniture designs. As well as the most beautiful, functional, comfortable chaise we’ve ever seen. Le Corbusier began – and was better known – as an architect with a very distinctive, spare style. He began experimenting with furniture design in 1928 as an alternative to relying on ready-made furniture created by others to complete the spaces he envisioned and built. The LC4 was one of his first designs, created for a villa in the Ville d’Avray. He later displayed it, along with other now-famous pieces of tubular steel furniture, at the Salon D’ Automne in Paris in 1929. The exhibit, titled Equipment for the Home, caused a sensation in the design world that continues to this day. Today, in fact, you can find Le Corbusier’s sleek, leather and steel designs everywhere, in fine homes and businesses around the world.




Many of his pieces have reached the status of Modernist design icons, and still look as cutting-edge as they did when they were first introduced eight decades ago. That’s the beauty of the LC4 Chaise Lounge – and the genius of Le Corbusier. You May Also Like Le Petit Confort Soft from £1033.00 inc. VAT Le Petit Confort Armchair LC2 from £995.00 inc. VAT Le Petit Confort 3-Seater Sofa from £1750.00 inc. VAT Le Petit Confort 2-Seater Sofa from £1355.00 inc. VAT Le Grand Confort Spéciale from £1207.00 inc. VAT Le Grand Confort 3-Seater Sofa from £2101.00 inc. VAT Le Grand Confort 2-Seater Sofa from £1631.00 inc. VAT Le Corbusier LC6 Dining Table (Italian) from £1231.00 inc. VAT from £349.00 inc. VAT from £547.00 inc. VAT LC1 Sling Basculant Chair from £614.00 inc. VATChaise Lounge Chair - Le Corbusier LC4 Replica - Cowhide - Brown & White This chair lounge chair comes made with cushions that feature high density polyurethane foam and a brown and white cowhide covering for added appeal and comfort.




It offers a 304 stainless steel frame and base construction which promotes optimal support and strength when laid upon. It promotes multiple reclining heights and features a detachable head rest pillow which allows you to easily adjust it to your preference. With its rubber grip pads it doesn't cause damage on the floor when placed into position. It comes complete with a natural curving shaped design which allows for increased comfort and relaxation each and every time. Premium 304 stainless steel frame and tubing Heavy duty spring support Detectable and comfortable head rest pillow Genuine Brown and white cowhide Steel frame base: powder-coated black Superbly finished and stitched Top quality components used 162cm (L) x 58cm (W) x 81cm (H) Usually dispatched within 1-3 business days. This item qualifies for 30 days return policy Found a lower price? Enquire about this product Please provide verification code The Cool, The Useful and The Collectible Auction at Rago on January 15-17




THE COOL, THE USEFUL AND THE COLLECTIBLE AUCTION AT RAGO ON JANUARY 15-17 Lambertville, NJ: The Rago Arts and Auction Center will auction over 1700 lots of cool, useful and collectible property on January 15, 16 and 17. Every item is unreserved, which means that everything must sell at the highest price offered that day, whatever that offer may be. The sale begins on Friday, January 15 with early 20th century design, silver, fine art, period fittings and furnishings. The Saturday auction emphasizes Italian, French and Scandinavian makers, as well as Post-War and contemporary art.  The Sunday auction emphasizes American designers, and more Post-War and contemporary art. UNRESERVED SESSION 1 (LOTS 1-562): FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 10 A.M. 568 lots of Early 20th C., Silver, Fine Art, Period Fittings and Furnishings. The sale begins with Early 20th C. pottery by Rookwood, featuring artists such as Sara Sax, Elizabeth Lincoln, Lenore Asbury, William Hentschel, Ed Diers, Arthur Conant, Fred Rothenbusch, and pottery made in Ohio by Roseville and Weller.




Arts and Crafts furniture features L. & J.G. Stickley, Gustav Stickley, Stickley Brothers. Art Glass by famous makers Tiffany Studios, Loetz, Daum, Galle, and Lalique. Arts and Crafts lighting includes a run of Handel lamps. Metalwork features several lots of Roycroft, WMF silver plate, several lots of Heintz from a collector; and silver by Georg Jensen, Gorham, and Reed and Barton. There is Contemporary Arts and Crafts furniture by Stickley by E.J. Audi. English and European ceramics Pierrefonds, Majolica, and Moorcroft. Estates items include ceramics by Minton, Meissen, and Majolica; fine art by Frederick Lee Bridell, Jean Jacques Rousseau, C. Schmidt, a bronze by Antoine-Louis Barye; clocks by Tiffany & Co. and Jaeger Le Coultre. There are Native American items, such as baskets, rugs, dolls; Asian fine and decorative arts; books, stamps, coins and ephemera. Lot 1: Sara Sax, Rookwood, Modeled Vellum vase, $600-800 Lot 50: Lalique, "Sophora" vase, $2,000-3,000 Lot 89: Roycroft, American Beauty vase, $700-1,000




Lot 129: Gustav Stickley, Rare swivel desk chair, $600-900 Lot 164: Arthur Wesley Dow (American, 1857 - 1922), Untitled (Ipswich scene), $300-400 Lot 256: Italian Modern Design Sterling, Double bowl with stipple finish, $200-400 Lot 342: George III, Bow front chest, England, ca. 1800-1810, $400-600 Lot 362: Antoine-Louis Barye (Attr.), Bronze depicting a circus performer astride a horse, $300-500 Lot 472: Chinese Famille Jaune Vase, Dragon and cloud decoration, $700-1,000 Lot 527: Tiffany & Co., Mantle clock, $500-700 UNRESERVED SESSION 2 (LOTS 600-1099): SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 10 A.M. 512 lots of 20th/21st C. Design: Italian, French, Scandinavian & Contemporary, Post-War & Contemporary Art. Italian made items include furnishings by Piero Fornasetti, Mario Bellini for Cassina, and Guido Falaschini for Pace/Mariani; glass by Venini, Murano, and Ercole Barovier; ceramics includes an assembled set of Adam and Eve coasters by Piero Fornasetti, and vases by Marcello Fantoni.




There is French furniture by Jacques Adnet. Scandinavian made items include more than 100 pieces of furnishings by makers such as Hans Olsen, Arne Vodder, Ib Kofod-Larsen, Omann Jun, Hans Wegner, Finn Juhl, Jens Risom, Poul Kjaerholm, and Erik Buck; glass by Edvard Hald for Orrefors, Oiva Toikka and Timo Sarpaneva for Iitala, and Ann Warff for Kosta Unik; lighting by Poul Henningsen for Louis Poulsen; and textiles by Karin Jonsson and Rya. There are contemporary furnishings by Jean Prouve for Vitra, Ligne Roset, Donghia, and Edward Ferrell; and contemporary Art by Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, Josef Albers, Victor Vasarely, Anni Albers, Alexander Calder. Damien Hirst, and Takashi Murakami. Lot 600: Piero Fornasetti, Coffee table, $1,000-1,500 Lot 622: Fulvio Bianconi/Venini, Fasce orrizontali vase, Murano, Italy, $2,500-3,000 Lot 665: Hans Olsen, Sofa and lounge chair, 1970s, $1,000-1,500 Lot 887A: Kiyoshi Saito (Japanese, 1907-1997), "Steady Gaze," 1962 $600-800




Lot 988: Dimitri Omersa; Abercrombie & Fitch Stitched leather turtle, $600-800 Lot 1032: Damien Hirst (British, b. 1965), Saturn Spin Art, $1,000-1,500 Lot 1045: Takashi Murakami (Japanese, b. 1962), "Skulls and Rocks", $800-1,000 Lot 1046: Karin Jonsson, Hand woven wool carpet, $400-600 Lot 1056: Poul Henningsen; Louis Poulsen, PH 4/3 Table lamp, Denmark, $400-600 Lot 1079: Erik Buck/Dyrlun, Danish foldable bar cart with bar tool set, $1,200-1,600 UNRESERVED SESSION 3 (LOTS 1101-1805): SUNDAY, JANUARY 17, 10 A.M. 709 lots of 20th/21st C. Design: American Masters & Contemporary Design, Post-War & Contemporary Art. Sunday’s sale features modern and contemporary furnishings by makers Florence Knoll, Warren Platner, Marcel Breuer, Mies Van Der Rohe, Le Corbusier, T.H. Robsjohn-Gibbings, Donald Deskey, Frederick Weinberg, Tommi Parzinger, Vladimir Kagan, Nakashima for Widdicomb, Edward Durell Stone, Paul Evans for Directional, Restoration Hardware, Roche-Bobois, Mitchell Gold and Bob Williams, Ralph Lauren Home, Karl Springer, Pace, Edward Wormley for Dunbar, Adrian Pearsall




, Eero Saarinen for Knoll International, Charles and Ray Eames, and four lots of "Aeron" desk chairs by Herman Miller. There is modern lighting by Gerald Thurston for Lightolier, Laurel Lamp Co., Robert Sonneman, George Kovacs, Koch and Lowy, and Lightolier. Contemporary Art features artists George Braque, Joan Miro, Will Barnett, Pat Steir, John Baldessari, Alex Katz, Jeff Koons, and Harry Bertoia; and there are several lots of sculpture by C. Jere, and James Bearden. There is contemporary glass by Ann Wolff, Michael Pavlik, and Bretislav Novak Jr. Pottery by Robert Winokur, Byron Temple, Karen Karnes, Edwin and Mary Scheier, Polia Pillin, Rose Cabat and Erni Cabat; turned wood by Arthur Espenet Carpenter, and Paul. and clocks George Nelson for Vitr and Jefferson. There are three tapestries by Edward Fields, descended through the family. Lot 1101: Florence Knoll/Knoll Associates, Sliding door cabinet, model 116, $2,000-3,000 Lot 1110: Le Corbusier/Cassina, "LC4" adjustable chaise lounge, $700-900




Lot 1179: Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881-1973), "Pour Roby" from "L'Age de Soleil", 1950, $300-500 Lot 1317: Edward Fields, Chaim Gross "Playing" factory proof sculpted wool area rug, $500-700 Lot 1360: Robert Winokur, Glazed stoneware teapot, $300-500 Lot 1415: Arthur Espenet Carpenter, Turned wood bowl and two platters, $800-1,200 Lot 1446: Surveyors Tripod Floor Lamp, $300-500 Lot 1715: Jeff Koons (American, b. 1955), Ink sketch on drum head, $600-800 Lot 1763: George Nelson/Vitra, Reproduction Kite wall clock, $350-550 Lot 1783: Herman Miller, "Aeron" chair, Zeeland, MI, 2006, $400-600 Saturday, January 9 – Wednesday, January 13, 12-5 p.m., Thursday, January 14, 12-7 p.m., and by appointment. Doors open at 9 a.m. on January 15, 16 and 17. Open House: Wednesday, January 13, 6 p.m., “Out with the Old - In with the New Year," a panel presentation featuring Ellen Tozzi, a certified professional organizer, and two Rago specialists, Frank Maraschiello and Chris Wise.




Rago’s is located midway between New York City and Philadelphia.   for those unable to attend. Online at com as of December 26. Text-only print catalogs are free. NOTES FOR THE EDITOR Rago is a leading U.S. auction house with $33 million in annual sales. It serves thousands of sellers and buyers yearly with a singular blend of global reach, personal service and competitive commissions for single pieces, collections and estates. Rago holds auctions of 20th/21st c. design, fine art, decorative arts, furnishings, jewelry, Asian, militaria, coins and currency, silver, historic ephemera, and ethnographic property. Rago also provides a range of appraisal services conducted by USPAP (Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice) compliant appraisers, performed to the highest standards set by the IRS, insurers and the Appraisers Association of America. Rago is located in New Jersey, midway between New York City and Philadelphia. Consignments invited for all of Rago’s auctions.

Report Page