BR EN
0

Search

Shop all

ELLER CHAIR BY PEDRO USECHE, BRAZIL,1991

Let yourself be enchanted by this magnificent collection piece that is part of designer Pedro Useche's iconic models.

The Eller chair was designed by designer Pedro Useche and presented in 1991 at the Design Brasil exibhition.

This piece is an example of how strong and simple Useche's design can be.

It consists of a metal structure and a cushion made of premium velvet and fastened with press studs.

It is in good condition with slight signs of use on the metal. The structure remains solid. The seat cushion has been completely renovated in a velvet premium fabric.

Dimensions: L46cm x W49cm x H85cm x SeatH41cm

 

 

Pedro Useche was born in 1956 in Venezuela and graduated in architecture from the Central University of Venezuela in 1981. In 1984 he moved to Brazil and in 1990 opened the Useche Arquitetura Design studio in São Paulo.

He has become one of the biggest names in national design, winning numerous awards and taking part in some of the most important international design exhibitions, such as the Milan International Furniture Fair; the Design Biennale in France (Saint-Etienne); and taking part in three design biennials in Brazil, at the Tomie Ohtake Institute and the Museu da Casa Brasileira.

In the 1990s, Useche Architecture accumulated a volume of pieces in Brazil that was unusual by Brazilian standards.

Useche's products are the result of much research and an admirable search for a balance between aesthetics and functionality. His pieces are constantly being renewed in search of new construction processes.

Useche's work is characterized by a balance between aesthetics and functionality.

Useche manipulates materials to exhaustion, including iron, wood, glass, stone, leather and rubber. Exploring their characteristics, properties and relationship between volume and weight.

"My first pieces have a slightly more rigid character, more from the school of architecture, they are easier to assimilate"

Pedro Useche's furniture reflects his own aesthetic language, which goes far beyond the purity of its forms, bringing playful, humorous references that often play with the collective imagination.

Enquire