Making a chair may not seem like a particularly creative task. Most designers use the basic, centuries-old model: a structure with a seat, some sort of back support, and legs. But some designers are pushing the envelope so far that it’s hard to tell if their creations even fall under the definition of the word “chair."
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This $7,500 Chair Comes with its Own French House Mixtape by Vice Magazine
French house music is all about dancing, but who, after hours at a club has not thought: I want to enjoy French house music while sitting down.
Read MoreThis Trippy Chair is an Art Piece Inspired By ‘90s House Music by Visual News
If you have a party house, it makes sense to fill it with party furniture—or at least art pieces that look like furniture. And there’s no festive “furniture” piece more ablaze with west-coast flavor than the French Touch chair by designer Juliette Mutzke-Felippelli.
Read MoreThis Acrylic Ghost Chair Inspired by Daft Punk Comes With Its Own Playlist by YAHOO
If you’ve got a thing for French house music — or just dig funky furniture with a cool backstory — this is the chair of your dreams.
Read MoreDaft Punk Inspired This Chair by UrbanDaddy
When You Want to Sit and Listen to French House Music, We’ve Got Just the Thing.
Read MoreSedia French Touch Di Joogii by Milano Design Week
Il nome French Touch dice molto e non dice niente su questa sedia dall’afflato artistico ideata da Joogii. Si tratta di una proposta ispirata alla house music francese degli anni Novanta e la derivazione disco si nota soprattutto dalla finitura cangiante del materiale.
Read MoreFrench Touch Chair by Juliette Mutzke-Felippelli by MocoLoco
Blurring the lines between art and design, French Touch is an art chair inspired by French house music during the 1990’s, paying homage to experimental artists like Daft Punk, Cassius and Etienne de Crecy and their legacy on modern electronic music. Designed and manufactured in Los Angeles, the French Touch is composed of dichroic film applied to CNC-cut acrylic and is connected by steel bolts. Naturally interactive with light, the dichroic application is combined with puzzle-like lap joints as part of a conceptual demonstration of the way tracks during the period were constructed by layering disco samples with filters to create it’s distinctive sound. The flat surfaces and changing angles of the chair legs allows a luminous color spectrum to reveal itself at every turn.