€
3450
€
3450
€
Available
Available
Available
Dimensions
55.5 cm width x 50.5 cm depth x 74 cm height with a seating height of 39.5 cm
Worldwide delivery
These transport prices are an indication and might change due to circumstances.
Nice Gerrit Rietveld 'Crate' chair. This chair is designed in 1934, however, we think this is a Cassina edition from the 1970s. This chair is made out of ash wood and has a colorless lacquer.
'Gerrit Rietveld designed the 'crate' series of furniture built from standardized pine boards – cheap material for packing crates – which were soon well-known as ‘crate furniture’. 'From 1935 on the progressive designs appeared at Metz & Co, where furniture by Rietveld had already been sold since 1930. The crate desk is also from this period before the war; purchased by the main store at the Keizersgracht in Amsterdam. This piece of furniture was relatively inexpensive. A painted model could be ordered for 16 guilders, while a fancier desk designed by Rietveld and Schröder in 1931 was ten times this price. In the store’s flyers, the furniture was labeled as ‘weekend furniture’, meant for ‘weekend homes, sunrooms, student and children’s rooms. This intended function is not just indicative of the wealthy clientele, but also implicitly shows the somewhat skeptical attitude that the store had towards Rietveld’s latest designs.' (source: kunstconsult)
This chair is in good condition with wear and tear due to its age, primarily stains. For us, this adds to the authenticity.
Documentation: Gerrit Th. Rietveld, Central Museum Utrecht, Utrecht 1992, p. 156."
I recently bought some amazing Artwork from AtKris Studio online. The whole experience was amazing. The transaction was amazingly efficient. The crating and shipping of the artwork to the United States from the Netherlands could not have gone smoother and the customer service was spot on!! Krista was amazing and I highly recommend AtKris Studio!
Quality, flexibility, very good communication, very happy with the coffee table I bought.
This bar is amazing. Beautiful and exactly as described. A custom crate (which was a work of art itself) was built in order to ship the piece to the U.S. The bar arrived in perfect condition without a scratch. I will say that take the crate apart was not easy and was a two-person job. But worth it in the end