The unique dovetail joints on each corner of the stool highlight the workmanship of the solid wood and exalt its qualities.
Part of the ‘Cassina I Maestri’ collection, this stool is indelibly marked with the signature of the designer, whose copyright belongs to his heirs, the use of which has been granted exclusively to Cassina and which in the form of a trademark, certifies the authenticity of the furniture; the ‘Cassina I Maestri’ logotype, which incorporates the Author's emblem as used by him as identification on his drawings; the production number which serves to place the item in the chronology of production, and tallys with the ‘Identity Card’ (which bears the same number).
Born Charles-Edouard Jeanneret, French designer Le Corbusier studied at the La-Chaux-de-Fonds Art School.
Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret, and a young woman called Charlotte Perriand presented new concepts of furniture at the Salon d’Automne in Paris in 1929. That collection of iconic furniture has not dated in the slightest, and still fits perfectly with the modern home today. This is mainly due to Le Corbusier’s conviction that the binomial shape/function value must be expressed in the three dimensional manifestation of any daily used and useful object.
Le Corbusier’s iconic furniture is produced by Italian designer furniture brand Cassina under license from the Fondation Le Corbusier.