Four Seasons Stool by Knoll
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Knoll® Four Seasons Stool An elegant barstool, the Four Seasons Stool from Knoll was originally conceived for the Four Seasons Restaurant in New York. The simple, understated styling and unique profile of this versatile chair is ideal for a kitchen breakfast bar or island, café table or beverage-service area. As a leading Modernist architect and furniture designer, Mies van der Rohe elevated industrial age materials to an art form. The elegant bar stool, conceived in 1958 for the Four Seasons Restaurant in New York designed by Philip Johnson, was never mass produced. The classic bar stool reflects Mies's signature spareness and features a lean profile, clean lines and meticulous craftsmanship. The bar height stool sports an upholstered seat with a hand buffed polished chrome frame. Dimensions: Knoll® Four Seasons Stool Knoll History ![]() The Knoll Company was founded in 1938 in New York by furniture craftsman Hans Knoll, who aspired to produce modern furniture that would be elegant, functional and affordable. In 1946, he married designer Florence Schust, 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 the some of the world’s most revered mid-century furniture designs. Beginning in the 1940s, Knoll pioneered the concept of developing a working relationship with corporate clients and designing to meet their needs. In the ensuing decades, Knoll 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. Today, in addition to acclaim as a design leader, Knoll is also recognized for pioneering sustainable, “green” design policies designed to protect the biosphere. In recognition of Knoll's contributions, the Louvre's Musée 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. |




