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Architonic ID: 1003336
SKU: 405 505 00
Year of Launch: 1955
Shell: glass fibre reinforced plastic in white.
Upholstery: one-piece polyurethane foam padding.
Seat height: 295 mm (255 mm with applied load, measured in accordance with EN 1335-1:2000).
Base: tubular steel, polished chrome finish.
Glides: fitted with plastic glides for carpet; felt glides for hard floors optionally available.
1020 x 835 x 825 mm
Concept
The Coconut is a typical 1950s design – it stands out for its humorous touch, formal clarity and minimal use of materials. Nelson himself compared it with a coconut cut into eight parts, and inverted the coconut’s colours: the plastic seat shell is white, while the single-section upholstery comes in a variety of colours. This return to the natural spatial shape of a shell enabled Nelson to create an inviting, comfortable armchair that offers users the freedom to sit in countless different positions. The ottoman, which Nelson designed to complement the armchair in 1955, ensured even greater sitting comfort and increased the range of uses.
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static.vitra.com media asset 9089566 storage master download Certificate 26521 GG Coconut Chair

United States
George Nelson was one of the most influential American designers working in the second half of the 20th century. As an architect, editor, lecturer, curator and a passionate photographer, he worked across both practice and theory to understand design’s relationship with society and culture. George Nelson: a biography The American industrial designer, architect and journalist George Nelson was born in 1908 in Hartford, Connecticut. From 1928 to 1931, Nelson studied Architecture and Fine Arts at Yale University. In 1932, he went to continue his studies at the American Academy in Rome. As the Director of Design at the world famous furniture manufacturer Herman Miller from 1946 to 1966, George Nelson did much to develop numerous product lines as well as the public image of the company. In 1946, Nelson also opened his own architecture and design studio in New York City. His studio produced numerous pieces of iconic furniture, many of which became mid-century modern classics, including the Coconut Chair (1955), the Marshmallow Sofa (1956), the Ball Clock (1948 to 1960), Sunburst Clock (1948 to 1960) and the Bubble Lamps (1947). Nelson’s Lounge Chair: the Coconut Chair The Coconut Chair was designed by George Nelson in 1955, and represents the changing lifestyles and attitudes of that decade. The chair is stylish and formal, but comfortable and relaxed at the same time. It is simple and easy, rather than fussy or overdesigned like other products of the time. Nelson was particularly inspired by Eero Saarinen's Kresge Auditorium, and of course by the shape of a coconut and the tropical informality of beaches and holidays. The Sunburst Clock: George Nelson’s clock for Howard Miller Clocks The Sunburst Clock was designed by George Nelson for Howard Miller Clocks, one of America’s largest clock manufacturers. The exuberantly colourful, futuristic form references the space age that was beginning at the time. A belief in technological progress and growing economic prosperity were key aspects of American culture in the 1950s; everything seemed possible and people sought out modernity for their homes and everyday lives. George Nelson brought his modern design touch into American homes by reinterpreting conventional items in new ways. Nelson designed numerous other clocks over the course of his career, including the equally iconic Atomic Clock for the German brand Vitra. The Marshmallow Sofa: expression of an era George Nelson’s Marshmallow Sofa (1956) was one of the first pieces of furniture to take on the style of pop art. This unusual piece of furniture is characterised by an almost graphical reinterpretation of the sofa as a three-dimensional structure of brightly coloured cushions. Nelson’s Marshmallow Sofa is a highly playful design which is wonderfully representative of the era in which it was created. Due to its unconventional shape, appearance and conception, it is one of the most distinctive sofas in design history, and for this reason it has become an icon of the pop era. © by Architonic