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Red and Blue Armchair
( designed by )
Gerrit Thomas Rietveld
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Subscription Plan
Premium
Style
Modernist, Iconic, De Stijl
Brand
Cassina
Required
Base Game
Creator
Meinkatz
( about this product )
A sculptural seat with a pure and rationalist form, this chair became an authentic Manifesto for Neoplasticism, embraced by the Dutch De Stijl movement in 1917. An outlook shared by Piet Mondrian, whose objective was to seek out the essential nature of things, combined with the harmonious equivalence of colours, and the use of right-angle. Rietveld produced his first prototypes in 1918, expressing the philosophy of organising space using the same colours for similar components. He later applied this same approach to separate out constructional elements according to their function. Thus the base was black, and the seats coloured. As a consequence, the name of the piece changed, from Slat Chair to Red and Blue.

( about ) the designer
Gerrit Thomas Rietveld
Gerrit Rietveld was a pioneering Dutch designer and architect whose work reshaped the language of modern design through a radical pursuit of clarity, structure, and abstraction. Closely associated with the De Stijl movement in the early 20th century, he translated its principles into both furniture and architecture, creating pieces that functioned as three-dimensional compositions of line, plane, and color. Iconic works such as the Red Blue Chair and the Schröder House embody his vision of space as an open, dynamic system rather than a closed form. Throughout his career, Rietveld continually evolved beyond De Stijl, embracing more functional, economical, and socially driven approaches to design, producing furniture that was accessible, rational, and often constructed with simple materials. His ability to move between artistic experimentation and practical innovation established him as a central figure in modernism, and his legacy continues to influence contemporary architecture, furniture design, and the broader trajectory of Dutch design.
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