The Thinking Man's Chair, designed by Jasper Morrison, is an armchair with an essential design that combines functionality and comfort. Made of painted metal, it is available in pure white, violet blue and oxide red. The structure combines flat and tubular bars, with armrests equipped with integrated cup holders. The oxide red version is also available in a special edition with a writing that highlights the radius of curvature of the structure.
Cappellini
Cappellini is an Italian company founded in Carugo in 1946 by Enrico Cappellini and operating in the contemporary furniture sector, synonymous with avant-garde design and a springboard for the greatest international designers. Their collections have become internationally recognized icons and exhibited in the most important museums in the world. The architect of the company's uniqueness and an emblematic figure in the international design scene is Giulio Cappellini, who is universally recognized as a trend setter and talent scout for young designers.
Jasper Morrison is an English industrial designer, born in London in 1959. He graduated from Kingston Polytechnic Design School and continued his studies at the Royal Collage of Art and the Hochschule der Künst in Berlin. In 1986 he opened his studio in London, where he designed design objects that fit perfectly into everyday environments. Together with his colleague Naoto Fukasawa he coined the term "super-normal", the name of the exhibition he set up in Japan in 2006, to indicate what good design should be: sober, useful and responsible.