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Vérité Rug

c. 1941/2022

by Charlotte Perriand
for Cassina

Vérité Rug

by Charlotte Perriand
for  Cassina

or Call to Order

Cassina presents Vérité, a blend of arti­sanal exper­tise and contem­po­rary design. Char­lotte Perriand first conceived the rug during her stay in Japan in 1940. It is one of two wool rugs she commis­sioned for the 1941 exhi­bi­tion: Selec­tion, Tradi­tion, Creation.” Vérité depicts the Japan­ese ideogram for Truth’ or the Mandarin char­ac­ter that in Chinese means Free’ impressed into the bril­liant red thick­ness of the pile. Re-edited for the Details Collec­tion, each step in produc­tion is metic­u­lously executed by hand at the cc-tapis atelier outside Kath­mandu in Nepal. The rug is hand-knotted with 125,000 knots per square meter using the finest natural mate­ri­als. The project grew out of the part­ner­ship with cc-tapis and in close collab­o­ra­tion with Pernette Perriand-Barsac as part of Cassi­na’s endeavor to create warm resi­den­tial settings enhanced with high-quality accessories.

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Charlotte Perriand

France (1903–1999)

In her eight-decade career, Charlotte Perriand contributed to countless design projects that allowed her to experiment with material. She explored working with tubular steel furniture, natural pieces in ebonized wood, bamboo furniture in Japan, and more. Paying close attention to the functionality of the furniture and the arrangement of the interior environment, Perriand designed pieces that were meant to be comfortably used and enjoyed in a space, as evidenced in her famed 1959 daybed or curved-back LC7 chair. Her revolutionary user-centric approach helped establish her as a seminal figure in the modernist design movement whose legacy endures to this day.

Not long after graduating from Ecole de L'Union Centrale de Arts Decoratifs in Paris, Perriand impressed critics with “Bar Under the Roof,” an installation featuring an aluminum and chrome bar counter and card table presented at the Salon d’Automne in 1927. The showcase established her as an avant-garde talent to watch and wowed a personal icon of hers, Le Corbusier—who invited her to join his studio and work on furniture designs with him and his cousin Pierre Jeanneret. The trio went on to craft some of the most enduring modern furniture pieces of the 20th century, such as the widely collected LC4 chaise longue, today produced by Cassina.

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