Not currently on display at the V&A

Contour Chair

Chair
1968 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

In 1926 the modernist designer Marcel Breuer predicted that in the future it would be possible to sit on air, a prediction suggestively fulfilled by David Colwell's transparent Contour Chair. As a consultant for ICI Plastic Division, Colwell designed it to capitalise on the properties of acrylic. The bubble-like seat was produced by firing a pneumatic ram into a heated sheet of acrylic and allowing it to cool.

Plastic helped create the fashionable futuristic space-age interiors of the day, and clear plastic was also used for inflatable furniture. The most famous example was the Blow chair from Italy, which literally used air pressure to support its sitter. The Contour chair was not produced in great numbers but is a good example of Pop design from the late 1960s that celebrated the use of new materials and unusual, sometimes improbable, forms. Furniture was to be fun, mobile and in most cases ultimately disposable.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleContour Chair (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Skeleton-moulded acrylic sheet shell, clipped onto a chromium-plated steel-rod frame
Brief description
Contour Chair, designed by David Colwell, manufactured by 4's Company Ltd, London, 1968; clear acrylic shell clipped into a steel rod frame
Physical description
Chromium-plated steel-rod frame with clear acrylic shell clipped in.
The shell of the chair is made from a square acrylic sheet clamped to a manufacturing frame. The sheet is softened in an air oven at approximately 165 degrees centigrade. A pneumatic ram with a small rectangular plate is pressed into the sheet, leaving the shape visible in the lowest point of the seat. The re-formed sheet is then hand stretched to fit onto the metal frame and attached with clips. This process leaves the original surface undisturbed, so that no finishing is required (which would be needed in a chair moulded in a former). The compound curves – forming seat, back and armrests – produce an exceptionally strong seating membrane. Unlike most plastic chairs the edge is flat and does not curve round the frame. The shell rests on a steel-rod frame which is made of one trapezoid shape for the back, and a rectangle for the seat connected to front legs which extend into a trapezoid form open at the front as base. The individual frame elements are welded together and also clamped along the bottom and top edges of the seat and also along the base where the two frame elements meet. The seat is held to the frame by the three clamps along the seat edges.
Dimensions
  • Height: 60.2cm
  • Width: 77.3cm
  • Depth: 73cm
Production typeMass produced
Gallery label
'CONTOUR' CHAIR Designed by David Colwell (British, born 1944) Manufactured by 4's Company Ltd, London Chrome-plated steel frame with acrylic shell 1968 The shell is formed from a square sheet clamped to a frame, made soft in an air oven at approximately 165 degrees centigrade and then depressed by a pneumatic ram with a small rectangular press. The original surface is left undisturbed and requires no finishing. Circ.65-1970(1989-2006)
Object history
Description of Craftsman from Hollis, R. 1970. Modern Chairs:1918-1970. The Whitechapel Art Gallery, London:
Industrial designer, born 1944. Trained at the Royal College of Art. Own office from 1968, London; consultant, ICI Plastics Division. Range of objects designed has included chairs and light fittings. Work exhibited Prospex 68 and Décor International London 1968.
Historical context
This chair is designed so that the frames and shells stack separately. Although the chair is meant for relaxed sitting in both domestic and commercial environments, it also functions outdoors, garden or poolside, since it is completely weatherproof.

As a consultant for ICI Plastic Division, Colwell designed this chair to capitalise on the properties of acrylic. The bubble-like seat was produced by firing a pneumatic ram into a heated sheet of acrylic and allowing it to cool. Plastic helped create the fashionable futuristic space-age interiors of the day and clear plastic was also used for inflatable furniture, most famously the Blow chair from Italy. The Contour chair was not mass-produced in great numbers.

Pop design celebrated the use of new materials and unusual, sometimes improbable forms. Furniture was to be fun, mobile and in most cases ultimately disposable.
Production
Attribution note: small production
Summary
In 1926 the modernist designer Marcel Breuer predicted that in the future it would be possible to sit on air, a prediction suggestively fulfilled by David Colwell's transparent Contour Chair. As a consultant for ICI Plastic Division, Colwell designed it to capitalise on the properties of acrylic. The bubble-like seat was produced by firing a pneumatic ram into a heated sheet of acrylic and allowing it to cool.

Plastic helped create the fashionable futuristic space-age interiors of the day, and clear plastic was also used for inflatable furniture. The most famous example was the Blow chair from Italy, which literally used air pressure to support its sitter. The Contour chair was not produced in great numbers but is a good example of Pop design from the late 1960s that celebrated the use of new materials and unusual, sometimes improbable, forms. Furniture was to be fun, mobile and in most cases ultimately disposable.
Associated object
CIRC.64-1970 (Version)
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.65-1970

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Record createdFebruary 2, 2000
Record URL
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