Grand Prix (chair)

Grand Prix
Grand Prix chair with the original wooden legs
Designer Arne Jacobsen
Date 1957
Materials Plywood
Style / tradition Modernist
Sold by Fritz Hansen (Denmark)
Height 78 cm (31 in)
Width 50 cm (20 in)
Depth 52 cm (20 in)

The Grand Prix is a stackable plywood chair, designed by the Danish architect and designer Arne Jacobsen in 1957 and presented at the Spring Exhibition of Danish arts and crafts at the Danish Museum of Art & Design in Copenhagen.

Originally known as the Model 4130, the chair was renamed after it won the Grand Prix at the XI. Triennale di Milano in 1957. Its construction and design mostly resembles the Model 3107, which Jacobsen designed 1955, but featured four wooden legs. The chair is produced by Fritz Hansen out of beech or teak. The wooden legs were later replaced by the metal undercarriage used on the 3107s, with whom it also shares the shape of the lower half of the shell.

The surface of the shell is then varnished, painted or finished with cloth or leather. The stool is 50 cm wide, 52 cm deep and with a seat height of 44 cm in total 78 cm high.

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