Butaque Clásica Strapping Lounge Chair, part of COLLECTIONAL's curated selection of Lounge Chairs by Clara Porset Dumas

Butaque Clásica Strapping Lounge Chair

Brand:

Luteca

Price on request

Butaque Clásica Strapping Lounge Chair by Clara Porset for Luteca reinterprets the traditional Latin American butaque through a refined and ergonomic lens. Defined by its low, X frame silhouette, the chair introduces softened curves that enhance comfort while preserving its architectural clarity.

Butaque Clásica Strapping Lounge Chair, part of COLLECTIONAL's curated selection of Lounge Chairs by Clara Porset DumasButaque Clásica Strapping Lounge Chair, part of COLLECTIONAL's curated selection of Lounge Chairs by Clara Porset DumasButaque Clásica Strapping Lounge Chair, part of COLLECTIONAL's curated selection of Lounge Chairs by Clara Porset DumasButaque Clásica Strapping Lounge Chair, part of COLLECTIONAL's curated selection of Lounge Chairs by Clara Porset DumasButaque Clásica Strapping Lounge Chair, part of COLLECTIONAL's curated selection of Lounge Chairs by Clara Porset Dumas

Clara Porset Dumas

Cuban-born furniture and interior designer

Clara Porset, a furniture and interior designer whose European modernism and Mexican vernacular tradition established her as a foundational figure in Latin American design and a pioneer of Mexican modernism.

Porset was born into a wealthy family in Matanzas, Cuba. She studied at Columbia University's School of Fine Arts and the New York School of Interior Design during the 1920s, and later traveled to Europe, where she attended classes at the École des Beaux Arts, the Sorbonne and the Louvre, and studied architecture and furniture design in the Paris studio of Henri Rapin. In 1933, despite her established professional practice in Cuba, she wrote to Gropius inquiring about enrollment at the Bauhaus, but pressure from certain political influences made this impossible.

Gropius recommended she instead study at Black Mountain College in North Carolina, which she attended in the summer of 1934. After returning to Cuba and serving briefly as artistic director of the Escuela Técnica para Mujeres, her political outspokenness forced her to leave in 1935.

She moved to Mexico, where she married the painter and muralist Xavier Guerrero and remained for most of her life, becoming one of the country's leading designers.

 

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