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Pierre Jeanneret Advocate & Press Chair - LC/PJ-SI-41-A Green

Price on request

Historical Design

1955-1956

Teak Wood, Upholstery (Green Cowhide)

65 x 91 x 66 cm
25.6 x 35.8 x 26 in

Pierre Jeanneret was a Swiss architect, painter and designer, greatly influenced by Charles-Édouard Jeanneret (Le Corbusier), his cousin and mentor. He joined the UAM (Union of Modern Artists) in 1930 and worked with Charlotte Perriand and Jean Prouvé in the Le Corbusier-Pierre Jeanneret studio in Paris. In the 1950’s, he created alongside with his cousin most of Chandigarh’s (India) large civic architecture and design projects. The Advocate model was widely seen at the High Court. As one of the founding fathers of modernism, Jeanneret imagined his furniture as an extension of his architectural principles with an emphasis on function. His conception of design was one of rationality, purity of lines and geometrical sense of space. The timeless nature of Jeanneret’s furniture has led to its incredible market renaissance in recent years.

Literature:
E. Touchaleaume, Alain de Gourcuff (ed.), Le Corbusier Pierre Jeanneret : L'aventure indienne, Paris 2010, pp. 168-169.

Location: New York

Artist

Pierre Jeanneret

Born in 1896 in Geneva, Pierre Jeanneret graduated from the Geneva School of Fine Arts in 1921 and moved to Paris this same year. Since then, he became his cousin Le Corbusier’s closest associate and he is perhaps better known for this collaboration.

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