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Cassina

4 Chaise longue à reglage continu

by Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret, Charlotte Perriand, 1928 — from CHF 5’218.00
Cassina 4 Chaise longue à reglage continu

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4 Chaise longue à reglage continu

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CHF 5’218.00 *
2 x in stock, delivery time 5-7 working days (country of delivery Switzerland)
3% advance payment discount*: CHF 5’061.46 (Save CHF 156.54)

Developed in 1928 by the designers Le Corbusier, Charlotte Perriand and Pierre Jeanneret as part of an avant-garde Cassina iMaestri Collection for the Paris Salon d'Automne the 4 Chaise longue à reglage continu or chaise longue LC4 caused furore on its première and can be considered a milestone of modern furniture history. This exclusive chaise longue offers, thanks to its ergonomic swing and freely positionable body, unique comfort. The timeless classic is produced, as with all objects in the Le Corbusier LC furniture collection, by Cassina.

Details

Product type Chaise longue
Dimensions

1: Height 70-81 cm
2: Length 160 cm
3: Depth 56 cm
Weight 28 kg
Colours Leather Scozia

Hide
Black hide
Spotted hide black-white-brown

Frame
Matt black lacquered
Chrome-plated

Material Cover: leather Scozia or hide
Headrest: leather, black
Frame: Steel
Frame: Steel, black, matt finish
Functions & Properties Adjustable
LC50 Anniversary
Warranty 24 months
Product datasheet Please click on picture for detailed information (ca. 0,2 MB).
Product presentation
Product family LC Collection

Popular versions

4 Chaise longue à reglage continu, Chrome-plated, Spotted hide black-white-brown
4 Chaise longue à reglage continu, Matt black lacqured, Leather black
4 Chaise longue à reglage continu, Chrome-plated, Black hide
4 Chaise longue à reglage continu, Chrome-plated, Graphite black
4 Chaise longue à reglage continu, Matt black lacqured, Black hide

FAQ

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Should the answers to your questions not be found here, our service team can be contacted Mon-Fri, 9 am - 5 pm and Sat, 9 am - 5 pm via 031 981 40 67.

Is the 4 chaise longue à reglage continu (LC4) available with the frame in a chrome finish?

The static floor-standing base of the 4 Chaise longue à reglage continu (LC4) is always painted black matt. The movable steel frame that rests on the frame is available in a chrome plated or black matt lacquered finish.

Can i create a custom pattern, e.g. only black and white, for the hide covers of the 4 chaise longue à reglage continu (LC4)?

As hide is a natural product the pattern cannot be adapted to customer requirements. Requests can be passed on to the production, but cannot be guaranteed to be fulfilled, such is always dependent on which hides are delivered during the production period.

Is the 4 chaise longue à reglage continu (LC4 lounger) also available in other colours?

In the Villa Church Edition Cassina offers the LC4 with two-tone frame and a grey Gascogne hide cover. In collaboration with Louis Vuitton there is also a special limited edition as tribute to Charlotte Perriand, the CP LC4.

Can i buy the 4 chaise longue à reglage continu (LC4) lounger element separately?

Cassina offers replacement loungers in leather or hide version for the LC4. Hide is a natural product, and as such the colours of the new hide cannot be influenced. Please indicate when ordering the production number of the existing lounger to ensure a correct fit with the frame.

How do I recognise an original 4 Chaise longue à reglage continu (LC4) from Cassina?

Each piece of furniture from the "Cassina i Maestri Collection" is authenticated by a stamp with the designer's signature and a unique identification number.

What is the new name of the LC4 Chaiselongue from Cassina?

In September 2022 the LC4 table was renamed Chaise longue à reglage continu by Cassina.

Why have the Cassina products of the LC collection been renamed?

On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the Cassina iMaestri collection in 2023, it was agreed with the heirs and foundations of Le Corbusier®️, Pierre Jeanneret®️ and Charlotte Perriand®️ to return to the objects original French names.The prefix "LC" has therefore be removed from the affected products, and now onlw the number is listed together with the product name (e.g. 4 chaise longue à reglage continu).

Design Story

The Design

When the LC4 was first introduced some eighty years ago at the Paris Autumn Salon, reactions were divided. The machine-like construction with frame and base in steel contradicted all former beauty conventions, and met so much incomprehension and rejection. However amongst those designers and critics who recognized the revolutionary potential of the chaise lounge, Le Corbusier's lounger was met with widespread enthusiasm. The chaise lounge was part of a collection of avant-garde furniture developed for the Paris Autumn Salon by the designers Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret and Charlotte Perriand and which today occupies a significant event in the history of design of early modernism, for all the LC4 chaise longue. Since the 1960s the Italian manufacturer Cassina has produced the LC4 along with the other furniture of the LC-series , and is the licensed producer of the original Le Corbusier recliner.

LC4 chaise longue and LC3 sofa byLe Corbusier

Designer

Because Le Corbusier's controversial views not only fundamentally influenced the development of modernity, but can also be found in the design of the LC4, the architect is today often referred to as sole author of the chaise lounge. Le Corbusier was born Charles Edouard Jeanneret-Gris in 1887 in the Swiss village of La Chaux-de-Fonds, and found his way to design via first painting and subsequently architecture. After studying architecture, a longer stay in Paris and study tours throughout Europe, in 1922 Le Corbusier published the text "A contemporary city for three million inhabitants," in which he first expounded his radical, purist position. In 1928 Le Corbusier incorporated these views in the LC4 chaise lounge and the other furniture designs he developed together with Charlotte Perriand and Pierre Jeanneret for the Paris Autumn Salon. After the Second World War Le Corbusier returned to work in his Paris office, deepened his theories of urban planning and realized buildings in Europe, the USA and India. Among the most prominent examples are the chapel in Ronchamp and the much-criticized "Unité d'Habitation", which was realized in France and Berlin. Le Corbusier died in 1965 in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin in Monaco.

Le Corbusier's visionary ideas significantly influenced early 20th century architecture and culture.

Le Corbusier chaise lounge LC4 with black hide covers

Production

The Le Corbusier LC4 is produced by Milan based furniture manufacturer Cassina. Also known under the name "Rest Machine" the Le Corbusier LC4 comprises a matt black lacquered steel base, a chrome plated, fully adjustable frame and a lounger available either with black leather or hide covers. The neck roll the chaise lounge LC4 is made in black leather. As one of Milan's oldest contemporary furniture makers Cassina have specialised in the processing of high quality materials such as leather and wood in production processes which combine traditional craftsmanship with technological innovation. For example, all leather for the Cassina LC4 is checked by hand ahead of its processing to ensure immaculate quality. Following this quality control the hides are scanned, and from these scans a computer calculates the optimal cutting pattern so that the defects are not included in the production leather. Furthermore, throughout the production process each LC4 chaise lounge carries a bar code so that it can be checked and controlled at every stage. Thus Cassina ensures that every single piece maintains the consistent quality customers rightly demand of the LC4 chaise lounge.

Charlotte Perriand, Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret – Designers of the LC furniture

Historical Context

In Le Corbusier one is confronted by a designer and architect who regularly and freely crossed the borders of conceived perceptions and so not only helped open up completely new perspectives but also helped define modernism. The LC4 chaise longue represents this radical change to modernity perhaps better than any other piece of its time. The entire Le Corbusier furniture collection is produced today by Cassina collection today under umbrella term "LC" and ranges from the LC1 armchair to the LC16 coat rack, and was conceived as a conscious alternative to the Art Deco, the style which at the period dominated interior design. Clarity, logic and functional reduction were the new priorities in keeping with the Le Corbusier's declared vision of purism, and as such the design of the Le Corbusier LC4 chaise longue avoids superfluous flourishes and decoration. With its combination of geometric tubular steel frame, the ergonomically designed recliner and the organic leather coverings, Le Corbusier's LC4 defines the historic tensions between man and machine - and so also attacks the utopian idea of a merger of the two.

Manufacturer

The Le Corbusier LC4 chaise longue is produced by Cassina. Founded in 1927 by the brothers Cesare and Umberto Cassina in Milan, by the 1950s Cassina had grown to become of the largest and most prestigious furniture producers in a city awash with large and prestigious furniture producers. Until the mid-1960s Cassina made a name for itself in context of large-scale commissions for a range of cruise ships, such as the famous Andrea Doria; a branch of the business which Cassina has expanded to become one of the leading and most reputable furnishers of high-class hotels and boutiques. In terms of furniture design Cassina developed during the 50's to become leading innovator. With its own research department the company was one of the first to encourage designers to develop their own visionary designs. In 1964 Cassina acquired the licenses of the first models of Le Corbusier LC4 chaise longue. And since then has been the only licensed producer. In addition to classics like the Le Corbusier recliner and the LC2 armchair Cassina continues to place a focus on challenging contemporary design; the company working with the most important Italian and international designers, including, Mario Bellini, Rodolfo Dordoni, Piero Lissoni, Konstantin Grcic and Phillipe Starck.

More about 'LC4' in our journal

(smow) offline: "gute aussichten - junge deutsche fotografie 2009/2010" Georg Brückmann

A recurrent theme, not only here in the (smow)blog but also in general throughout the (smow) global network is the subject of illegal copies of design classics. Or better put when is a design classic a design classic? At the HGB Leipzig Rundgang in February...

(smow)offline: Charlotte Perriand in Switzerland

...Among the most famous of these collaborations are the from Cassina produced LC4 Chaise Longue, LC2 Armchair and LC7 Swivel Chair which Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret and Charlotte Perriand originally created for their "Maison la Roche" in Paris...

All 'LC4' Posts

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