Skull Chair from the Nouvelle Vague Exhibition in Milan this April.
Sit. Relax. Contemplate mortality. Scratch yourself through the eyeholes.
Skull Chair from the Nouvelle Vague Exhibition in Milan this April.
Sit. Relax. Contemplate mortality. Scratch yourself through the eyeholes.
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5nWsANBkgA
A promo by Moma Propaganda for the Lar Centre Design and Decoration Hall in Brazil.
This is the Octopus Chair, designed by Spanish painter and sculptor, Maximo Riera.
It’s the first in a planned series of animal chairs, and the artist describes it as a ‘base and a point of departure for the pieces to come’.
Cephalopodtacular.
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uiBZdf8iW8&feature=player_embedded
The Spring Wood Chair, designed by Carolien Laro.
Pros: ingenious design, flexible.
Cons: butt-stripes, ugly wheels.
Deal breaker: potential bare-arsed flesh-nipping hazard.
Things fall down the crack in the back of the sofa. This we know. Now though, design studio Daisuke Motogi Architecture have re-purposed that flaw into a design feature.
Behold: the Lost In Sofa chair.
Chairs. They’re so boring. You sit down. You get up. Where’s the joy?
Well how about a Tetris Chair from Mexican industial designer Gabriel Cañas? Tweak your cheeks at all?
Or, more engaging still, the Vuzzle Chair (above right), which consists of 59 small detachable, magnetised cushions which you can arrange according to, eh, your physiology.
Now, that’s a lot of sit.