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Tabouret Solvay
Jean Prouvé, 1941

Tabouret Solvay Jean Prouvé, 1941

The construction of the Tabouret Solvay illustrates clearly the principles of construction of Jean Prouvé. As an engineer, he liked making visible the structural and supporting elements of its furniture. Here, four powerful legs held by a central metallic element. With its flat seat, the Tabouret Solvay can also be used as a side table.

Tabouret Solvay Jean Prouvé, 1941

Seat & base solid wood with oiled finish in natural oak, smoked oak or American walnut

Connecting element sheet steel, powder-coated (smooth) in deep black

Dimensions  Ø35 x 40 x H45 cm

Tabouret Solvay Jean Prouvé, 1941

Tabouret Solvay
smoked oak

Tabouret Solvay
oak

Tabouret Solvay
american walnut

Tabouret Solvay Jean Prouvé, 1941
Tabouret Solvay Jean Prouvé, 1941
Tabouret Solvay Jean Prouvé, 1941

Jean Prouvé

Jean Prouvé

Jean Prouvé completed his training as a metal artisan before opening his own workshop in Nancy in 1924. In the following years he created numerous furniture designs, and in 1947 Prouvé established his own factory. Due to disagreements with the majority shareholders, he left the company in 1953. During the ensuing decades, Prouvé served as a consulting engineer on a number of important architectural projects in Paris.

Jean Prouvé left his mark on architectural history again in 1971, when he played a major role in selecting the design of Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers for the Centre Pompidou as chairman of the competition jury. Prouvé's work encompasses a wide range of objects, from a letter opener to door and window fittings, from lighting and furniture to façade elements and prefabricated houses, from modular building systems to large exhibition structures – essentially, almost anything that is suited to industrial production methods.

In close cooperation with the Prouvé family, Vitra began in 2002 to issue re-editions of designs by this great French constructeur.