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Bola de Latão Lounge Armchair

by Lina Bo Bardi, 1951

The Bola de Latão chair features a striking design: each front leg is capped with a brass sphere at the top • the translation of its name from Portuguese • and soft leather wrapped around a tubular iron structure and stretched using ties. It was produced only as a limited run of six for Lina Bo Bardi’s private Sao Paulo residence, the renowned Glass House. This authentic re•edition is authorized by the Lina Bo and P. M. Bardi Institute and comes with a certificate of authenticity.

• Base structure made of back iron
• Upholstery offered in belt leather
• Reissued by Etel
• Made to order

Reference: #00001880
in | cm

Base

Base (Metal - Black)

Colors shown are only indicative and may not be an accurate representation of the finishing due to variations in system/s used and/or display settings.


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About Lina Bo Bardi

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Lina Bo Bardi spent her childhood playing in the shadows of the basilica of St. Peter's. As an adult, she undertook a classical architectural training at Rome University and later went to work for the offices of the famed Gio Ponti in Milan. Applying herself to numerous disciplines -- including housewares design, architecture, and urban planning -- Bo Bardi gained confidence and experience; in 1941 she was appointed editor of Quaderni di Domus, a post that allowed her to conduct research in the field of industrial design and craftsmanship.

Bo Bardi’s greatest achievements, however, came after World War II and were realized in her adopted homeland, Brazil, where she seems to have been destined to live. Traveling with her husband, Pietro Maria Bardi, she first settled in Rio de Janeiro, attracted by the city’s modernism. Later, the Bardis moved to Sao Paolo, where Pietro was invited to found a museum. Though Sao Paolo is and was a vast and bustling city, Lina Bo Bardi left an indelible mark on the city's architectural offerings with her square spiral staircase in the Popular Art Museum, the overall design of Sao Paolo's Museum of Modern Art, and many smaller projects. The MASP project, on which she began work in 1957, suffered numerous interruptions in construction. When it was finally completed in 1962, architect Aldo Van Eyck proclaimed that "it is at the same time both large and small, few and many, near and far, simple and complex, open and closed; it will furthermore always be both part and whole and embrace both unity and diversity."

Bo Bardi left her signature on the wider cultural landscape with her dazzling and somewhat surreal stage designs and her ephemeral exhibition design work. Her concepts were organic, and she strove to create buildings, spaces, and pieces whose unique segments could almost stand alone. Her style and design philosophies have received accolades throughout the world, and her works have been shown in many exhibitions both before and since her death in 1992.