Gubi
C-Chair
French Cane
Price starting from € 813,00*
*Price valid for the French Cane version with seat and backrest in French Cane and frame in black stained oak matt lacquered (cod. 10024449).
The C-Chair dining chair designed by Marcel Gascoin in 1947 is re-proposed by the Gubi brand maintaining the simple lines and minimalist aesthetics of the initial project. The solid structure in oiled or matt black stained oak or in oiled American walnut is combined with the seat and backrest which are also available in a lighter material such as French cane or paper cord. The result is a product with an artisanal taste which, by combining elegance and comfort, fits perfectly into contemporary private contexts such as living rooms, kitchens and dining rooms.
W.41 x D.53 x H.79 cm
Seat Height 46 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 (3)
Personalize your request
Frame
Select
Black Stained Oak Matt Lacquered
American Walnut Oiled
Oak Oiled
American Walnut Oiled
Oak Oiled
Select
Select
Last born among the giants of high-end Danish design, Gubi stands out for its "heretical" style, very distant from the fruitful Scandinavian tradition. More than sobriety and simplicity, this company prefers a polished refinement, to the inspiration of nature it replaces clear retro-chic references, revisited with great inventiveness in a contemporary point of view. Suspended between past and future, Gubi furniture has a highly iconic appearance, combined with high quality construction. The Gubi catalog is very wide and covers all areas of furniture: from chairs to sofas, from tables to furnishing accessories, passing through a vast and appreciated selection of lighting.Read more
Designed by
Marcel Gascoin
Marcel Gascoin (1907-1986) was a French designer best remembered for his important role in renewing the French design scene in the post-war period. A significant part of his work consisted in particular of modular wooden furniture, prefiguring a design trend that would become increasingly popular in the second half of the twentieth century. Born in Le Havre into a family of sailors, Gascoin was very familiar with boat interiors from an early age and from there drew the inspiring principles of his design, including the use of retractable systems that made it possible to optimise the limited space in cabins and which he also transferred to the domestic sphere. Trained as a cabinetmaker and decorator, in the 1930s Gascoin joined the Union des artistes modernes (UAM) at the invitation of its president Robert Mallet-Stevens, although he did not fully adhere to the principles of modernism due to his strong ties with the artisan tradition and with a natural material of the past such as wood. It was in the years of reconstruction immediately following the Second World War that Gascoin achieved great prominence: his idea of a democratic design, intended for mass production at affordable prices, was embraced in that period by the political authorities who needed to relaunch production in large numbers to deal with the destruction left by the war. In those years Gascoin became a consultant to the ministers in charge of supervising the reconstruction of the country and coordinated several initiatives aimed at facilitating designers' access to mass production, which was totally new to the French furniture industry at the time, gathering around him some of the most talented young designers of the time including Pierre Guariche, Joseph-André Motte, Pierre Paulin and many others. The late 1940s and early 1950s were his period of maximum creative intensity: it was then that many of his most famous furnishings saw the light, re-proposed in recent years by the Scandinavian brand Gubi. Dissatisfied with the level of collaboration found in companies, Gascoin also founded his own brand, Comera (COmpagnie des MEubles Rationnels), which soon specialized in the production of modular kitchens and is still active today.Read more