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The Breeze armchair belongs to the collection of the same name which is made up of a dining chair and armchair. The structure is made up of a bent extruded aluminum tube which gives the seat its characteristic shape. Welding with TIG technology increases resistance as well as aesthetics. The technical fabric is fixed to the backrest via a particular technopolymer rod which allows the insertion of the fabric itself inside a channel and therefore the fixing of the seat. For the backrest, the insertion of a stainless steel bar promotes the correct tension of the fabric and ensures correct positioning in use.
DESIGNER: Chiaramonte-Marin
It is the passion for objects understood in their sense of industrial product, the glue of the professional partnership between Alfredo Chiaramonte and Marco Marin, founding partners in 1989 of the homonymous Designstudio. The professional interest ranges across numerous sectors (interior, graphic, industrial, lighting) and makes possible the permeation of experiences and knowledge accumulated over these years, creating a contamination between different fields, a fundamental humus to make the soil of ideas fertile.
Here, for example, is how the multi-year collaboration with glass companies on the island of Murano has made it possible to short-circuit two apparently different sectors, creating a line of blown glass objects and glasses produced by Nason Moretti for Emu Group, leading companies respectively in the production of Murano glassware and garden furniture.
Alfredo Chiaramonte was born in Bologna in 1961, he studied at the Faculty of Architecture of Venice. Marco Marin was born in Venice in 1964 where he graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts specializing in industrial design.
They have collaborated with well-known companies in the furniture and publishing sector including Miniforms, Emu Group, Bonaldo, Vistosi, Nason Moretti, Andromeda International, Hoffman Italia, Renault Italia, Moulinex, Artificia, Gemina publishing group.
They carried out a period of teaching at the European Center for the conservation of the architectural heritage of Venice.
In these over the years they have received various awards and some of their works have been exhibited in permanent collections and international museums including the Correr museum in Venice, the Beauburg in Paris, the MOMA in S. Francisco, the Venice Biennale collaborating on a project by Yoko Honor.