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Tabouret Cabanon / Tabouret Maison du Brésil
Tabouret Cabanon / Tabouret Maison du Brésil
Tabouret Cabanon / Tabouret Maison du Brésil
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Museum für Gestaltung Zürich
Ausstellungsstrasse 60
8031 Zurich
Museum map
Museum für Gestaltung Zürich
Toni-Areal, Pfingstweidstrasse 94
8031 Zurich
Pavillon Le Corbusier
Höschgasse 8
8008 Zürich
Museum map
In 1952, Le Corbusier built a small holiday home in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin on the French Riviera. His “Cabanon” (French for “cabin”) was recognized by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in 2016. The timber building made of prefabricated elements is clad in rough-edged boards to look like a log cabin. The interior, with an area of 3.66 by 3.66 meters, is equipped with only the essentials. In addition to simple built-in furniture, Le Corbusier designed a cubic stool with slits as handles. The closed box made of chestnut wood features dovetail joints and makes for a spartan but multipurpose piece of seating furniture. Based on the Tabouret Cabanon, seven years later Le Corbusier developed a cubic stool with finer joints and two closed surfaces without slits for the Maison du Brésil, a student residence in Paris. Depending on how it is positioned, the stool offers three different seat heights.
Tabouret Cabanon
Le Corbusier, 1952
Cassina S.p.A., IT
Tabouret Maison du Brésil
Le Corbusier, 1959
Cassina S.p.A., IT
Tabouret Cabanon, 1952, Entwurf: Le Corbusier
Tabouret Maison du Brésil, 1959, Entwurf: Le Corbusier
Zeichnung: Weicher Umbruch, Zürich