An unusual classic.
Elegant and comfortable. New colors bring the café-chantant atmosphere back to life, evoked in the "Vienna 144" chair. A reworking of a model by Adolf Loos, the austere line of steam-bent beech lifts the backrest and redesigns the space. The seat is a ring to stabilize the curved feet in one piece. The back legs and the back are made of a single piece of curved wood. Available in a wide variety of seats.
Michael Thonet (1796-1871) and his five children were the most successful furniture manufacturers of the industrial era. Invited by Austrian chancellor Metternich, who had seen his products at the Exhibition of the Society of the Friends of the Arts in Koblenz, to develop his own patent in Austria, in 1842 Michael Thonet left Boppard, in Germany, to settle in Vienna, where in 1853 he founded the company "Gebrüder Thonet" involving his five children.
In the capital of the Hapsburg Empire, Michael Thonet went from glued laminated wood to steam-curved rods, that is, to an industrial chemical and mechanical process. Thanks to this innovation he began to produce wooden furniture proposing a collection of elegant and at the same time rational forms, with a process that allowed mass production.
In 1911 the Gebrüder Thonet catalog had 980 different models. At the end of the Second World War independent production units were born in various nations. Recently Gebrüder Thonet Vienna has developed its activity between tradition and innovation, continuity and renewal, giving life to an articulated production program, which aims in the first place to recover a series of historical objects created by Gebrüder Thonet in the form of re-editions.
The name Gebrüder Thonet Vienna represents the very idea of contemporary furniture.
Gebrüder Thonet Vienna GmbH (GTV) is part of a great European history that merges tradition and innovation, renewing its style lines through continuous project research.