Cabbage Chair thumbnail 1

Cabbage Chair

Chair
2008 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This prototype chair was made in 2008 by the Tokyo-based studio, nendo. A scale prototype for the 'Cabbage Chair' (W.22-2011), it is made entirely from waste paper. In creating the Cabbage Chair, Nendo designer Oki Sato was interested in re-using materials. The final version of the Cabbage Chair uses fabric left over from the process of making fashion designer Issey Miyake's 'Pleats Please' collection. With this prototype, Sato managed to create a chair made entirely from paper, with no additional core or supports. The chair's final design was then developed using this and other prototypes in different materials, colours and sizes. The rough appearance of the chair contrasts with its comfort, the recycling of materials and the minimal production and distribution costs make it a valuable addition to the evolving debate on design and sustainability.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleCabbage Chair (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Paper chair, scale prototype for nendo's 'Cabbage Chair'. This prototype was made from a roll of waste paper. To create the chair, a cut was made down the roll, to about half-way down its height. Individual sheets of paper were then pulled away from the roll, layer by layer. These sheets created a stable structure, suitable for sitting with the addition of any core or supports.
Brief description
Chair, 'Cabbage chair', designed by Oki Sato [nendo], pleated paper, 2008
Physical description
A stool constructed of layers of pleated paper.
Dimensions
  • Height: 66cm
  • Width: 78cm
  • Depth: 76cm
  • Weight: 6.6kg
Production typePrototype
Gallery label
(01/07/2023)
Cabbage Chair prototype

This prototype seat is formed from layers of paper. The paper is a by-product from producing pleated fabric for fashion designer Issey Miyake’s Pleats Please line.

Rolled up and tied together, it is sliced to the centre and the layers peeled out like a cabbage. Its simplicity reduces fabrication and distribution costs and addresses environmental concerns.

Designer: Oki Sato for nendo
Date: 2008
Location: Tokyo
Materials: Waste paper
Museum no. W.2-2013

[Young V&A, Design Gallery, Design changes materials we use, long object label]
Object history
This chair was made as a scale prototype for the Cabbage Chair (2008). Nendo's designer Oki Sato was one of a group of artists and designers commissioned in 2008 by the fashion designer Issey Miyake to imagine 'how things would be in the future'. The Cabbage Chair was Sato's contribution, exhibited with the other commissioned work at the 21_21 Design Sight Gallery in Roppongi, Tokyo.

In his design, Oki Sato focussed on the idea of re-using materials. He began experimenting with the rolls of paper that had been discarded in the process of making Miyake's 'Pleats Please' collection. With this prototype, Sato managed to create a chair made entirely from paper, with no additional core or supports. The chair's design was developed using this and other prototypes in different materials, colours and sizes. Full-scale versions were made in fabric.

The V&A also holds an example of the final Cabbage Chair design (W.22-2011).
Associations
Summary
This prototype chair was made in 2008 by the Tokyo-based studio, nendo. A scale prototype for the 'Cabbage Chair' (W.22-2011), it is made entirely from waste paper. In creating the Cabbage Chair, Nendo designer Oki Sato was interested in re-using materials. The final version of the Cabbage Chair uses fabric left over from the process of making fashion designer Issey Miyake's 'Pleats Please' collection. With this prototype, Sato managed to create a chair made entirely from paper, with no additional core or supports. The chair's final design was then developed using this and other prototypes in different materials, colours and sizes. The rough appearance of the chair contrasts with its comfort, the recycling of materials and the minimal production and distribution costs make it a valuable addition to the evolving debate on design and sustainability.
Associated object
W.22-2011 (Object)
Collection
Accession number
W.2-2013

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Record createdNovember 15, 2012
Record URL
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