
Armchairs
Armchairs collection by COLLECTIONAL Dubai

Gallotti & Radice
413 Armchair, designed by Studio G&R, it is a modern dining armchair characterized by an exclusive design and by the particular back leg directly connected to the backrest in order to offer even more comfort and stability.

OKHA
Gloob 2, designed by OKHA, is in a upholstered with a base in ash, oak, brass, powdercoated mild steel. It is a very beautiful and comportable piece that suits you living room perfectly.

OKHA
LWM, designed by OKHA, is in a upholstered with a base in ash, oak, walnut, powdercoated mild steel. It is a very beautiful and comportable piece that suits you living room perfectly.

OKHA
GTA, designed by OKHA, is in a upholstered with an aluminium base with a very sleek and beautiful design. It is an exceptional display of luxury.

House of Finn Juhl
The Grasshopper Chair, designed by Finn Juhl. This was one of his first attempts at expressing his artistic freedom in the form of furniture. The Grasshopper has already reached icon-status via numerous illustrations in the design literature. The chair also marks the first in a long line of designs that would go on to manifest Finn Juhl as one of the all-time greatest in furniture design.

House of Finn Juhl
The Chieftain Chair, designed by Finn Juhl. The iconic Chieftain Chair is one of Finn Juhl’s absolute masterpieces, representing the peak of his career as a furniture designer. At its introduction in 1949, the chair marked a renewal of the Danish furniture design tradition. Today, it is perceived as one of the most important exponents of the Danish Modern movement in the US during the 1950s. The chair is available in walnut or oak with upholstery in selected, exclusive leather types.

House of Finn Juhl
The 45 Chair, designed by Finn Juhl. In the Autumn of 1945, Finn Juhl presented the 45 Chair at the annual Cabinetmakers’ Guild Exhibition. Today, the chair is widely regarded as one of the most revolutionizing and iconic pieces within Danish furniture design. Finn Juhl dreamt of studying art history and his deep understanding of international contemporary art is abundantly clear in the bold 45 Chair.

House of Finn Juhl
The 48 Chair, designed by Finn Juhl. The 48 Chair is easily recognized because of Finn Juhl’s characteristic, sculptural shapes and delicate details. The organically shaped seat and backrest are raised from the carrying frame, visually lifting the seated person, making it appear as if the law of gravity has been defeated.

House of Finn Juhl
Reading Chair, designed by Finn Juhl. In 1953, Finn Juhl designed this simple, unpretentious, yet thoroughly well-designed and visually pleasing chair. The chair is perfectly fit for private homes, hotels, restaurants and conference facilities alike. The Reading Chair is manufactured in oak with a back piece of oak and walnut or in a fully black painted version.

House of Finn Juhl
Pelican Chair, designed by Finn Juhl. His fascination for surrealism is visible in the Pelican Chair. Out of all his many designs, the Pelican Chair was probably the one furthest ahead of its time. The Pelican Chair is produced in two versions - with or without buttons. It is manufactured with a cushion and upholstered by hand in Denmark in fabric. The legs are available in oak, walnut, or black paint.

Nader Gammas
Nader Gammas’ contribution; Nimbus, a frosted acrylic chair, is an experimentation on the permanence of matter and a testament to nature’s symbiotic relationship with all four elements; air, water, earth, and fire. Embracing simplicity, purity, and subtlety in his designs, people experiencing his work have room to explore their sensations and emotions and question the permanence of matter and the subjectivity of perception. The chosen material for the Nimbus chair, acrylic, produces a surreal, dream-like quality, with translucent contours bound together by light and air. The sculptural chair is juxtaposed by its ever-changing ethereal quality, as light, color, and body heat pass through it, transforming it time and again. Gammas’ work demands attention; the contrasts within the chair, romantic yet austere, solid yet luminous, embody a pulsing halo of energy as it interacts with its environment. Nader Gammas entered the world of design as a light specialist. His latest foray into functional art incorporates his ethos of objects that are not only aesthetically beautiful and superbly functional but, more importantly, engaging with their surroundings.

Man of Parts
Via del Corso, designed by Yabu Pushelberg, is the centre of life in historical Rome. Meeting at the Piazza Venezia with its three-sided roundabout and monumental churches “the Corso” is impressive. Yabu Pushelberg’s lounge chair has the same purposeful and imposing profile as the via but is balanced by soft curves and a lightness from its floating feet.

Man of Parts
Rua Ipanema, designed by Yabu Pushelberg. Rio de Janeiro trades in curves, from Oscar Niemeyer’s architecture to the signature design of its sidewalks along Rua Ipanema. The Rua Ipanema lounge chair by Yabu Pushelberg has a sultry form on a swiveling base that embraces the samba and relaxed elegance of Brazil.

Man of Parts
Lombard Street, designed by Yabu Pushelberg, is famous for a steep, one-block section with eight hairpin turns in San Francisco’s Russian Hill and was designed to help residents descend the hill gracefully. The Lombard Street club chair by Yabu Pushelberg references the beautifully structured curves and formality of the street, providing both comfort and poise for those who sit.

Man of Parts
Jinbao Street, designed by Yabu Pushelberg, is a forward-looking design named for a design-forward nation. Jinbao Street is Beijing’s highest high-street with the world’s finest boutiques. The spirit of inventive architecture that is defining modern China is both minimal and bold at the same time and has captured the world’s attention.

Man of Parts
Granville Bridge Sidechair, designed by Sebastian Herkner. Towering above Granville Island – Vancouver’s beloved artistic and cultural hub – the cantilevered Granville Street Bridge runs through the heart of the city into the buzzing downtown core’s entertainment district. The soft upholstery of Sebastian Herkner’s Granville Bridge Chair reflects the serene grey skies of Vancouver while the hardwood structure imitates the suspension bridge itself with its supportive bent plywood back.