Item No. 100577865
New colors
Designed by Marcel Breuer

Cesca™ Chair - Armchair

$1,216.00
Item No. 100577865
New colors
Designed by Marcel Breuer

Cesca™ Chair - Armchair

$1,216.00

Informed by the rationalist ideals of the Bauhaus, Marcel Breuer’s revelatory use of material and simple cantilever design resulted in one of the world’s most iconic chairs. More Details
Ebonized Beech
Natural Beech
Black
Polished Chrome
Red
White
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Cesca™ Chair - Armchair
$1,216.00
Details
The Cesca Chair has a rare, almost innocuous, simplicity to its design—linearity balanced by subtle curves; a graphic juxtaposition of industrial and natural materials; and a cantilevered form that seems to float in thin air. In 1928 it was an international sensation. Nothing like it existed at the time, and its iconic form proves to be effortlessly contemporary as the decades roll by. Originally known as the B32, the chair was later renamed “the Cesca” after Marcel Breuer’s daughter, Francesca.
  • Tubular steel frame inspired by that of a bicycle.
  • A comfortable cantilever design.
Designer
Marcel Breuer
Collection
Cesca Seating Collection
General Dimensions
  • 31½" H 23½" W 23½" D
Product Weight
16 lbs
Assembly
Comes fully assembled
Warranty
5-year warranty (terms and conditions may vary)
Item No.
100577865
Side Chair

Side Chair

  • Height (in): 31½
  • Width (in): 18½
  • Depth (in): 23½
  • Weight (lbs): 14
  • Seat Height (in): 17¾
Armchair

Armchair

  • Height (in): 31½
  • Width (in): 23½
  • Depth (in): 23½
  • Weight (lbs): 16
  • Seat Height (in): 17¾
  • Arm Height (in): 27

Shipping Options

  • In-Home Delivery

Return Options

Not satisfied with your purchase? You have 30 days to return your order. Learn more.
Marcel Breuer

Marcel Breuer

Marcel Breuer is equally celebrated for his achievements in architecture and furniture. He was a student and master carpenter at the Bauhaus in the 1920s, and then the architect on many notable projects, including the original Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the Cleveland Museum of Art, and the UNESCO headquarters in Paris.

More on Marcel Breuer