• Padded Leather Armchair/ Zbyněk Hřivnáč for the Hotel Praha/ 1970s
  • Padded Leather Armchair/ Zbyněk Hřivnáč for the Hotel Praha/ 1970s
  • Close-up of a black leather chair with wooden armrests, blurred indoor background. Detail from a pair of leather and wood armchairs, once part of the Hotel Praha, an infamous mid-century hotel built in Prague during the 1970s.
  • A pair of leather and wood armchairs, once part of the Hotel Praha, an infamous mid-century hotel built in Prague during the 1970s.
  • A pair of leather and wood armchairs, once part of the Hotel Praha, an infamous mid-century hotel built in Prague during the 1970s.

Padded Leather Armchair
Zbyněk Hřivnáč for the Hotel Praha
1970s

£4,200

Description:

A leather and beech armchair designed by Czechoslovak designer, Zbyněk Hřivnáč, during the 1970s for the Hotel Praha. 

Commissioned by the Communist Party in Czechoslovakia, construction began on the Hotel Praha in 1975. Beyond hosting the communist delegation, one of the salient aims of the Hotel was to entertain and impress foreign visitors. 

Amidst a backdrop of austerity in the years prior to the Velvet Revolution, the Hotel was an architectural emblem created by some of the leading architects and designers in the former communist state. The colossal, curved building covered 9800 square-meters and  comprised 136 rooms, a restaurant, swimming pool, and bowling alley. 

Few examples of the furniture from this once immense Gesamtkunstwerk survive. However, this leather armchair, with its throne-like proportions, is a piece truly expressive of the monumental decadence that characterised this communist-era hotel. The wide portions echo the sprawling dimensions of the former Hotel Praha which was demolished in 2014.  

Specifications:

Designer: Zbyněk Hřivnáč (b.1932)
Design Period: 1970-1980
Materials: Leather and stained beech 
Height: 
Width: 
Length: