Alias
Spaghetti Chair
Without Armrests
Price starting from € 366,00*
*Price valid for the version without armrests – frame in varnished steel – seat and backrest in PVC (cod. 10120001).
Spaghetti is one of the first chairs of the Alias company to become part of the MoMA collection in New York. Others have been added to this, but Spaghetti still remains today a cornerstone of contemporary design, capable of inspiring creations of today and yesterday for its creative simplicity, beauty and artistic value. The Spaghetti structure is in painted or chromed steel; seats and backrests are made with the characteristic pvc rod weaving, available in different colors and shades, from the most discreet transparent to bright shades, ideal for being noticed in any context. Among the materials, Alias offers leather, straw, fabrics and new fibers to adapt to diversified needs.
W.40 x D.51 x H.84 cm
Seat Height 47 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.
Suggested versions (2)
Personalize your request
Frame
Select
Seat and Backrest
Select
Select
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
Giandomenico Belotti
Giandomenico Belotti (1922-2004) was an Italian designer and architect remembered above all for his fruitful collaboration with the Alias company and in particular for the Spaghetti chair (1979), the Bergamo-based company's debut product in the furniture sector and so popular that it was included in the permanent collection of the MoMA in New York. A native of Bergamo, Belotti studied architecture in Milan for many years, interrupted by the outbreak of the Second World War and by his professional practice during the 1950s at various Milanese studios, including that of the engineer Franco Scolari and the architect Guglielmo Ulrich, where he mainly worked on the design of private homes built in Milan. Having finally obtained a degree in architecture in Venice in 1961, Belotti then worked in the 1960s and 1970s on various projects concentrated mainly around the Bergamo area, including the house with adjoining showroom of the Baleri family in Albino (1970), today known by the brand Abitare Baleri. Enrico Baleri had drawn Belotti to a chair designed in 1962 for a hotel in Marina di Massa, the shapes of which would be perfected over the years until they became the basis of his famous Spaghetti, produced in the late 1970s by the newly founded Alias, which had been founded shortly before by Belotti himself in partnership with Baleri and Carlo Forcolini. Between the 1980s and 1990s Belotti designed several other seats for Alias and garden furniture for Foppapedretti (including the successful Plen Air collection, 1995).Read more