During her early years at Le Corbusier's studio, Charlotte Perriand, full of ambition and innovative ideas, was given an extraordinary mission: to bring furniture to life. Le Corbusier presented her with nine challenges, nine radically different ways of sitting. Each chair had to be unique, corresponding to a specific form, use, material, and cost. But that wasn't all! She also had to consider the relationship between humans and objects.
Charlotte immersed herself completely in this project. She drew, she redrew, but the sketches remained sketches. To bring her ideas to life, she had to take action. She went in search of artisans, cabinetmakers, and welders to transform her drawings into real objects.
Among these nine sketches, one of them would mark the history of design: the fourth sketch, representing a reclining woman. Hours of work were necessary to give birth to this chair that would become an icon: the LC4. The "LC" for Le Corbusier, and the "4" for the fourth drawing.
Thus, in 1929, the LC4 chair was born. A simple yet revolutionary object that perfectly embodies the spirit of the time: a quest for modernity and functionality.