We don’t have an image of this object online yet. V&A Images may have a photograph that we can’t show online, but it may be possible to supply one to you. Email us at vaimages@vam.ac.uk for guidance about fees and timescales, quoting the accession number: CIRC.824-1968
Find out about our images

Not currently on display at the V&A

Chair

1928 (designed), c. 1959 (manufactured)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Chrome-plated tubular steel, cantilevered frame. The back supports stop half-way up the back rest and are screwed onto the back frame with two steel screws on both sides. The seat and back are separate caned panels in black-painted, steam-bent beechwood frames.


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Brief description
Model B32; Designed by Marcel Breuer in 1928. Manufactured by Gebruder Thonet in 1930, and put into production again in 1959.
Physical description
Chrome-plated tubular steel, cantilevered frame. The back supports stop half-way up the back rest and are screwed onto the back frame with two steel screws on both sides. The seat and back are separate caned panels in black-painted, steam-bent beechwood frames.
Dimensions
  • Width: 43.2cm (Note: measurement converted from department files)
  • Depth: 53.3cm (Note: measurement converted from department files)
  • Height: 78.7cm (Note: measurement converted from department files)
Object history
Marcel Breuer designed this chair the year after the designers Mart Stam and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe introduced their cantilevered designs to the public in 1927, although it apparently was not manufactured until about 1930. It was an innovative design in several respects. Breuer broke a convention that he himself had introduced: the use of a continuous tubular-steel frame behind the back. In this design he attached to the frame a seat and back made of wood and cane. This resulted in a more complex, more interesting design, in which the textures of the natural materials contrasted markedly with the shiny steel frame. The use of cane would have been, for contemporaries, an unmistakable allusion to nineteenth-century bentwood furniture, made by the firm of Thonet, which had enjoyed renewed popularity among modernist architects.

As a result of a complex series of lawsuits brought by Anton Lorenz, the man who had taken over the fledgling Standard-Mobel company in 1928, Breuer was denied the right to claim the B32 as his own design. This was because in 1929, following the sale of Standard-Mobel to the Thonet company, Lorenz obtained from Stam the rights to Stam's cantilevered chair. Armed with this, Lorenz sued Thonet, asserting that they were, by manufacturing any cantilever chair, infringing his patent rights. Dispirited both by Lorenz's actions (referring to him as 'a patent brigand') and by being dragged into court, Breuer gave up designing in tubular steel. When the court finally handed down its ruling in 1932, Lorenz - as owner of the licence to produce Stam's patented cantilever - legally obtained the sole right to manufacture all rectilinear chairs with only two legs, including the B32. Stam's name therefore replaced Breuer's in the Thonet catalogues. Nonetheless, the chair was still generally published in contemporary and post-war publications as Breuer's design and, later, between 1962 and 1963, production of the B32 resumed under Breuer's name.

This chair is an example of the 1960s production of Breuer's design. It is slightly larger than the original chair.
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.824-1968

About this object record

Explore the Collections contains over a million catalogue records, and over half a million images. It is a working database that includes information compiled over the life of the museum. Some of our records may contain offensive and discriminatory language, or reflect outdated ideas, practice and analysis. We are committed to addressing these issues, and to review and update our records accordingly.

You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.

Suggest feedback

Record createdJune 24, 2009
Record URL
Download as: JSON