Alias
Manzù Armchair
Price starting from € 6.472,00*
*Price valid for the version with black embossed varnished base and upholstery in Frau leather - ottoman excluded (cod. 09006001).
An armchair with a simple and sincere design, capable of attracting attention regardless of the environment in which it is placed. Manzù is an armchair with supporting shell in compact polyurethane co-moulded with polyurethane foam and 5-spoke base in painted cast aluminum. Alias designs it with everyday life in mind, creating it tailored for those who seek maximum comfort when sitting. The company catalog offers numerous variants and variables to better facilitate placement within studios, lounge areas or more.
W.72 x D.93 x H.88,5 cm
Seat Height 43 cm
Salvioni Design Solutions delivers all around the world. The assembly service is also available by our teams of specialized workers.
Each product is tailor-made for the personal taste and indications of the customer in a customized finish and that is why the production time may vary according to the chosen product.
To discover the full range of services available, visit our delivery page.
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Since its foundation by Giandomenico Belotti, Carlo Forcolini and Enrico Baleri, Alias has always put design at the center of its work. Within an expressive line that favors the lightness and versatility of the furnishings, every designer is free to express his own peculiar poetics with very different creations. Initially focused on tables and chairs, both for the home and for the office, Alias has gradually extended its range of products to include sofas, sofas, beds and bookcases.Read more
Designed by
Pio Manzù
Pio Manzù (1939-1969) was an Italian designer with a short but fruitful career that was mainly concentrated in the field of car design. Son of the famous Bergamo sculptor Giacomo Manzù, Pio trained as a designer at the legendary Hochschule für Gestaltung where his teacher was Tomás Maldonado, a great supporter of a technical-scientific conception of design. This imprinting also accompanied him in his activity with the Autonova research group, which he founded in 1965 together with Fritz Bob Busch and Michael Conrad, strongly focused on the industrial and technical aspects of car design. The prototypes he created with Autonova attracted the attention of Dante Giacosa, head of the FIAT Style Centre and creator of the timeless Nuova 500, who involved him in his activities. The first result of this collaboration was the City Taxi concept car, which was then followed by Manzù being asked to design the FIAT 127 (which went into production in 1971 and won the “Car of the Year” award in 1972), a car that would completely revolutionize the shape of the popular car, leaving a lasting mark throughout the 1970s and beyond. In the same years, Manzù also occasionally dedicated himself to the design of furniture, now partly reproduced by Alias, and home accessories, including the famous Cronotime clock (1968), reissued by Alessi. Having died at just thirty years of age in a tragic car accident, one of his best-known creations was only released posthumously: the celebrated Parentesi lamp for Flos (1971), based on some of his drawings sent by his widow to Achille Castiglioni and awarded the Compasso d’Oro in 1979.Read more