Bertoia Bird Lounge by Knoll

 
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Bertoia Bird Lounge
by Knoll
Our Price: $2,687.00 + Free White Glove Delivery
 
 
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Custom: Usually ships in 6-8 weeks. Free White Glove Delivery

 
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Select "In-Stock" tab to make all options available.
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Upholstery Color:
Frame Color:
Add Ottoman:
Protection Plan:
Bertoia Bird Lounge
by Knoll
Our Price: $2,687.00 + Free White Glove Delivery
 
 
Quantity:
 
Custom: Usually ships in 6-8 weeks. Free White Glove Delivery

 
Questions? May we assist you?
Call 1.888.677.1600
Or have a Product Specialist Call You! Click Here
 
Share |

 
Overview
Dimensions
Design Story

Knoll® Bertoia Bird Lounge

Harry Bertoia's 1950 experiment with bending metal rods into practical art produced a revered collection of seating, including the unique Bird Lounge chair and ottoman. Innovative, comfortable and strikingly handsome, the chair's delicate filigree appearance belies its strength and durability. In Bertoia's own words, “If you look at these chairs, they are mainly made of air, like sculpture. Space passes through them.” The collection is offered with a seat cushion or full-cover upholstery option.

Construction – Welded steel with rods in polished chrome finish or bonded rilsan, a very durable and adhesive fused nylon-dipped finish. Scratch, chip, and chemical resistant, stainless steel connections. Four plastic glides. The base wire diameter measures 11mm. The frame edge wire diameter measures 4.5 mm; the interlacements measure 4mm in diameter.

Upholstery – Bird Lounge chairs only available with full cover. Full covers are stretched over wire frame and attach to seat basket with hooks. Cushions and covers fit all Bertoia High Back Chairs manufactured since 1952 within a limited range of tolerance. Available in Mariner, Cuddle Cloth , and Velvet colors.

Finishes – Frame is available in black, white, and polished chrome.

Dimensions: Knoll® Bertoia Bird Lounge

Knoll History

Knoll Studio

The Knoll Company was founded in 1938 in New York by furniture craftsman Hans Knoll, and is today a leading U.S. manufacturer of classic residential furniture as well as office chairs, files, storage and full office systems.

In 1946, Knoll married designer Florence Bassett, who had been trained as an architect, and who would ultimately be recognized as one of the most influential women in 20th century design. She played a key role in the company's development, championing the Bauhaus approach and recruiting some of its most famous luminaries (such as Mies van der Rohe, Eero Saarinen and Marcel Breur), resulting in Knoll becoming the only authorized seller of some of the world’s most revered Mid-Century furniture designs.

Beginning in the 1940s, Knoll pioneered the concept working directly with corporate clients and designing to meet their needs. In the ensuing decades, the company introduced tables to accommodate electronic technology, and office chairs with a fresh premise: rather than the sitter constantly adjusting the chair, the chair would adjust to the sitter! The result of this approach was a line of innovative office chairs combining ergonomic support with intuitive adaptability. In addition to acclaim as a design leader, Knoll is today also acknowledged for its sustainable, “green” environmental policies.

In recognition of Knoll's contributions, the Louvre's Musee des Arts Decoratifs in Paris staged a 1972 exhibit devoted solely to the company's furniture. Knoll also currently has more than 40 pieces in the permanent Design Collection of The Museum of Modern Art in New York.

Harry Bertoia

Italian-born sculptor, designer and jeweler Harry Bertoia (1915-1978) showed an early interest in the art of jewelry making. In 1939, he received a scholarship to the Cranbrook Academy of Art, where he would meet future design collaborators Ray and Charles Eames, and where he would later launch his professional career teaching metal work and jewelry design. Due to the shortage of metal throughout the war years, he concentrated more on jewelry making during this period, although the forms and metal-working techniques he developed would later emerge in his large sculpture work. In the late 1940s, Bertoia learned welding at Santa Monica City College in California, and immediately began to experiment, producing wire and platform sculptures as his first attempts.

“If you look at these chairs, they are mainly made of air, like sculpture. Space passes right through them.”
— Harry Bertoia

The Knoll company hired Bertoia in 1950 to develop new designs for chairs. Bertoia had recently studied what was then called Body Dynamics (today we might call it ergonomics), and the knowledge he gained contributed to the success of his classic, form-fitting welded wire chair in 1952, the Diamond chair. For his entire line of welded wire chairs, he not only created the airy designs, but also devised the production molds used for mass manufacture.

Bertoia then returned to working on wire and platform sculptures, which evolved into panels and screens, leading to his early public pieces. It is estimated that the astonishingly prolific Bertoia created an estimated total of 50,000 sculptures!

Most of Bertoia’s designs, whether they are chairs or sculptures or sounding pieces, were born on paper first. He loved the quickness and spontaneity of the medium, and continued experimenting with his colorful monographics into his last year, 1978. Harry Bertoia won numerous architectural and artistic awards for public sculptures throughout his career, including the Architectural League of New York gold medal and the Craftsmanship Medal of the American Institute of Design.

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