The
Cesca chair designed by Marcel Breuer in 1928 is the epitome of a quiet diplomacy in design. The sort of chair you'd find in the
canteen at the United Nations, or in Brasilia's Niemeyer designed
Congress. It exhibits a soft power that exists in the background; playing a deliberately subtle
role.
The chrome tubular frame is objective and intelligent, while the hand-caned supports are honest and reflect a level craft that is neither patronising nor dated. Breuer's B32, [as it was known before being renamed after his daughter Francesca] is the sort of chair you'd want to run for Prime Minister... but in the mean time, these Italian originals from the 1970's will serve
Ultraloft exceedingly well.