LC4 Chaise longue à reglage continu
Le Corbusier, Perriand & Jeanneret
Production Cassina
Chaise longue designed by Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret and Charlotte Perriand, 1928. Produced by Cassina since 1965 as part of the iMaestri collection.
Dubbed a “machine for resting” by its designers, the LC4 Chaise longue à reglage continu turns the act of reclining into a precise and adjustable form. Its polished chrome-plated steel frame rests on a matt black painted steel base, allowing the reclining angle to be adjusted smoothly, without visible mechanisms. The mattress, available in self-supporting fabric, leather or hair-on leather, follows the curve of the frame and supports the body along its full length, with a black leather headrest completing the design. Created in 1928, the LC4 remains one of the clearest expressions of modernist design, bringing together function, comfort and technical clarity.
Design: 1928
Dimensions: W 160 × D 56.4 × H 69 cm
Le Corbusier, Perriand & Jeanneret
The collaboration between Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret, and Charlotte Perriand took shape in Paris during the 1920s, within the Rue de Sèvres Atelier. After starting his practice with Pierre Jeanneret in 1922, Le Corbusier brought Charlotte Perriand on board in 1927. Lasting until 1937, this partnership proved decisive in the field of furniture design, where architecture and furnishings were conceived as parts of a single system, in which function, space, and daily life were closely intertwined. From this collaboration emerged a series of projects that combined conceptual rigor, technical experimentation, and industrial production, laying the foundation for a modern design language that would remain central in design history.
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