Welle Modular Seating
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$735
–
$7,030
$2,330
SKU: VRPN-131398-GRP-1
$2,970
SKU: VRPN-131398-GRP-2
$3,315
SKU: VRPN-131398-GRP-3
$3,580
SKU: VRPN-131398-GRP-4
$3,990
SKU: VRPN-131398-GRP-5
$4,430
SKU: VRPN-131398-GRP-6
$5,585
SKU: VRPN-131398-GRP-8
$2,875
SKU: VRPN-131400-GRP-1
$3,665
SKU: VRPN-131400-GRP-2
$4,290
SKU: VRPN-131400-GRP-3
$4,625
SKU: VRPN-131400-GRP-4
$5,070
SKU: VRPN-131400-GRP-5
$5,695
SKU: VRPN-131400-GRP-6
$7,030
SKU: VRPN-131400-GRP-8
$1,095
SKU: VRPN-131402-GRP-1
$1,405
SKU: VRPN-131402-GRP-2
$1,600
SKU: VRPN-131402-GRP-3
$1,830
SKU: VRPN-131402-GRP-4
$2,010
SKU: VRPN-131402-GRP-5
$2,440
SKU: VRPN-131402-GRP-6
$3,030
SKU: VRPN-131402-GRP-8
$1,430
SKU: VRPN-131399-GRP-1
$1,830
SKU: VRPN-131399-GRP-2
$2,040
SKU: VRPN-131399-GRP-3
$2,225
SKU: VRPN-131399-GRP-4
$2,440
SKU: VRPN-131399-GRP-5
$2,835
SKU: VRPN-131399-GRP-6
$3,520
SKU: VRPN-131399-GRP-8
$1,405
SKU: VRPN-131401-GRP-1
$1,830
SKU: VRPN-131401-GRP-2
$2,150
SKU: VRPN-131401-GRP-3
$2,440
SKU: VRPN-131401-GRP-4
$2,835
SKU: VRPN-131401-GRP-5
$3,230
SKU: VRPN-131401-GRP-6
$3,990
SKU: VRPN-131401-GRP-8
$735
SKU: VRPN-131403-GRP-1
$950
SKU: VRPN-131403-GRP-2
$1,085
SKU: VRPN-131403-GRP-3
$1,225
SKU: VRPN-131403-GRP-4
$1,405
SKU: VRPN-131403-GRP-5
$1,600
SKU: VRPN-131403-GRP-6
$2,070
SKU: VRPN-131403-GRP-8
Description
Starting in the 1960s, Verner Panton brought a Pop Art slant to furniture, never more so than in his Welle modular seating. Consisting of 6 individual shapes, the units can be clustered as pairs or trios or arranged in larger interior “landscapes.” Panton’s protean imagination made waves then and lives on in this truly original lounge seating.
Specifications
Size
- Welle 1: 40.2" h x 63.8" w x 19.7" d (102x162x50cm)
- Welle 2: 31.5" h x 42.5" w x 19.7" d (80x108x50cm)
- Welle 3: 27.6" h x 94.5" w x 19.7" d (70x240x50cm)
- Welle 4: 24.8" h x 55.1" w x 19.7" d (63x140x50cm)
- Welle 5: 15.7" h x 42.5" w x 19.7" d (40x108x50cm)
- Welle 6: 15.7" h x 21.3" w x 19.7"d (40x54x50cm)
Material
Foam, plywood
Details
- Group 1: Linara, Grain, Remix
- Group 2: Messenger, Divina, Divina MD, Divina Melange, Hot Madison, Hallingdal, Re-wool, Steelcut, Steelcut Trio, Tonus, Parotega
- Group 3: Fibre, Vidar
- Group 4: Teddy FR, Still, Karakorum, Karandash
- Group 5: Sprinkles, Razzle Dazzle
- Group 6: Alpaca Alto, Argo, A Soft Place, Baru, Gentle
- Group 8: Reflex, Sonar
- COM and COL are available on request
Brand
Verpan
A sensation when it arrived in 1967, Verner Panton’s iconic S chair (commonly cited as just the Panton chair) from the legendary Danish designer (1926-1998) cemented his reputation as a true innovator. An ineffable character in his own right, Panton left an enormous body of colorful, inventive and unmistakably “Verner” lighting, furniture and accessories that posses timeless appeal. With the originals long sought-after by collectors, Verpan, a Danish furniture and lighting firm dedicated itself to the works of its fellow countryman, acquired the exclusive rights to a significant measure of his work in close collaboration with the Panton estate and his widow Marianne Panton.
Verpan was established in 2003 with the production of lighting and expanded in 2010 when a furniture range was added. The dedicated Panton manufacturer not only continues to offer legacy designs made during the designer’s lifetime but also is now beginning to introduce pieces of furniture that were never before put into production from an archive of his original sketches. In doing so, they continue Panton’s pioneering spirit. As he said, “A less successful experiment is preferable to a beautiful platitude.”
Designer
Verner Panton
Verner Panton has been called the most un-Danish of famous Danish designers. His 1960 breakthrough, the injection-molded, plastic S Chair, vividly summed up his experimental nature, propensity for bold color and relish for new materials. Then regarded as the bad boy of post-war Scandinavian design, he had originally studied architecture at the Royal Art Academy in Copenhagen, graduating in 1951. After a 2-year stint in the offices of fellow Dane Arne Jacobsen, he struck out on his own and his early architectural proposals using unlikely elements such as cardboard and plastics attracted wide notice.
One of the iconic designers of the 20th century, Verner’s work was animated with a sense of fun and remains popular and influential today. “Most people spend their lives living in dreary, grey-beige conformity, mortally afraid of using colors,” said the designer, who died in 1998. “I try to show new ways, to encourage people to use their imagination and make their surroundings more exciting.”