double zero leisure chair
Design David Adjaye,
2015
Two circles, two elementary modules grafted into a construction geometry of art deco inspiration, openly communicate the tendency towards maximum formal simplification. This is the prelude to top-quality industrial production, an elegant economy of volumes expressed by the possibility offered by the chromed steel frame to structure the design into a complete seating family. Thus a chair and a stool are born, with and without armrests, with the addition of a small two-seater sofa, a sophisticated formal evolution dictated by good taste and class. This is a return to order, a transition towards a simultaneously luxurious and synthetic language.
700W*810D*980H
1310W*810D*980H
Sir David Frank Adjaye OBE RA (born September 1966) is a Ghanaian British architect.[1] Adjaye is the lead designer of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, located on the National Mall in Washington, DC.
Agostino Moroso, with his wife, Diana, founded the Moroso company in 1952 with an artisanal approach to making sofas, armchairs and furnishing accessories. Their iconic designs have propelled them within the upholstered furniture market, with help from a long list of well known designers: Ron Arad, Patricia Urquiola, Ross Lovegrove, Konstantin Grcic, Alfredo H?berli, Toshiyuki Kita, Marcel Wanders and others. Each piece maintains a noticeable Moroso style while representing other cultures as well. Its international outlook has landed Moroso into the MoMA in New York, Le Palais de Tokyo, the Grand Palais in Paris.