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About the Item
A white vintage 3 high portable storage container, which was designed by Joe Colombo in 1969, Italy and executed by Bieffeplast, Padova, Italy. The white Joe Colombo Boby storage container was made of white plastic and features 2 drawers and compartments. 5 black wheels ensure a safety standing.
Stamped (boby produzione bieffeplast padova italy designed Joe Colombo patented) and signed with his lettering.
Joe Colombo (1930-1971) was a famed architect and furniture designer. The material, which use he loved was plastic. Joe Colombo designed dynamic furniture pieces, which promised to fit in every flat and for every required function.
The boby storage container is exhibited in the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
The vintage condition is fair with signs of age and use. Some stains at the top. We described the condition with images at the description.
Approx. measures:
Width 43.5 cm
Depth 41.5 cm
Height 73.5 cm.Creator: Joe Colombo (Designer)Design: Boby TrolleyDimensions: Height: 28.94 in (73.5 cm)Width: 17.13 in (43.5 cm)Depth: 16.34 in (41.5 cm)Style: Mid-Century Modern (Of the Period)Materials and Techniques: PlasticPlace of Origin: ItalyPeriod: 1960-1969Date of Manufacture: circa 1969Condition: FairWear consistent with age and use.Seller Location: Vienna, ATReference Number: 1stDibs: LU1069817886581Shop All Joe Colombo
Joe Colombo
He died tragically young, and his career as a designer lasted little more than 10 years. But through the 1960s, Joe Colombo proved himself one of the fields most provocative and original thinkers, and he produced a remarkably large array of innovative chairs, table lamps and other lighting and furniture as well as product designs. Even today, the creations of Joe Colombo have the power to surprise.
Cesare Joe Colombo was born in Milan, the son of an electrical-components manufacturer. He was a creative child he loved to build huge structures from Meccano pieces and in college he studied painting and sculpture before switching to architecture.
In the early 1950s, Colombo made and exhibited paintings and sculptures as part of an art movement that responded to the new Nuclear Age, and futuristic thinking would inform his entire career. He took up design not long after his father fell ill in 1958, and he and his brother, Gianni, were called upon to run the family company.
Colombo expanded the business to include the making of plastics a primary material in almost all his later designs. One of his first, made in collaboration with his brother, was the Acrilica table lamp (1962), composed of a wave-shaped piece of clear acrylic resin that diffused light cast by a bulb concealed in the lamps metal base. A year later, Colombo produced his best-known furniture design, the Elda armchair (1963): a modernist wingback chair with a womb-like plastic frame upholstered in thick leather pads.
Portability and adaptability were keynotes of many Colombo designs, made for a more mobile society in which people would take their living environments with them. One of his most striking pieces is the Tube chair (1969). It comprises four foam-padded plastic cylinders that fit inside one another. The components, which are held together by metal clips, can be configured in a variety of seating shapes (his Additional Living System seating is similarly versatile).
Vintage Tube chairs generally sell for about $9,000 in good condition; Elda chairs for about $7,000. A small Colombo design such as the plastic Boby trolley an office organizer on wheels, designed in 1970 is priced in the range of $700.
As Colombo intended, his designs are best suited to a modern decor. If your tastes run to sleek, glossy Space Age looks, the work of Joe Colombo offers you a myriad of choices.
Find vintage Joe Colombo lamps, seating and other furniture for sale on 1stDibs.
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