Tel une fleur d'une espèce inconnue avec quatre pétales charnus et de fortes racines, le fauteuil Clover enrichit la nature elle-même grâce au talent créatif de Ron Arad. Edité par Driade, ce fauteuil en polyéthylène trouve peut être utilisé aussi à l'intérieur qu'à l'extérieur. Entre sculpture et mobilier, le fauteuil Clover est un incontournable de la marque Driade.
Born in 1951 in Tel Aviv, Israel, Ron Arad studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Jerusalem and then at the Architectural Association in London. In 1981, he founded his own studio "One Off Ltd." in London with Caroline Thorman, and began producing his unconventional furniture by hand, most of it in welded sheet steel, with a strong sculptural character. In 1989, together with Alison Brooks, a Canadian architect, he founded the firm Ron Arad Associates Ltd. In 1994, he founded the Ron Arad Studio in Como and was visiting professor of product design at the Technical University of Vienna until 1997. Since then, he has taught industrial design and furniture design at the Royal College of Art in London. Ron Arad's work is part of the permanent collection of many museums, from the MoMa in New York to the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris and the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. Ron Arad works with leading brands such as Vitra, Magis, Kartell and Alessi, and his best-known creations include the Victoria & Albert collection for Moroso and the DO-LO-REZ rugs for Nanimarquina, with their astonishing optical effect.
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DRIADE
Founded in 1968 by Enrico Astori, Antonia Astori, and Adelaide Acerbi, the brand Driade originates from Italy. Since then, the Italian company Driade has continuously collaborated with renowned designers to promote a true philosophy of living. Sophisticated and elegant, the house of Driade is defined as the home of a collector. Art objects and everyday items blend harmoniously, embodying the vision of Driade. Creativity in every product is the company’s mission. Being open to differences makes the Driade project forward-looking. Driade champions style and rejects any principle of uniformity, allowing everyone the freedom to create in their own way.