Item No.
653176
Ant Chair
$436.00
Item No.
653176
Ant Chair
$436.00
Black
White
- An iconic chair by Danish designer Arne Jacobsen.
- Beautiful finish keeps the wood grain visible, making each chair unique.
- Stackable up to six high.
- 31.9" H 20.4" W 18.9" D
Shipping Options
- Ships via FedEx
Return Options
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5-year warranty (terms and conditions may vary)
Designed by Arne Jacobsen for Fritz Hansen
Manufacturer SKU:
A comfortable classic —
With a gentle give in the seatback and waterfall seat edge to ease pressure on the undersides of legs, the Ant Chair is ideally suited to the human body.
Details
Innovation makes for comfort
Arne Jacobsen helped shape design history when he accommodated three different bends in one piece of plywood, simply by narrowing the center. The resulting Ant Chair (1952) has a back with a gentle give and comfortable curved seat. When it was first designed, Jacobsen told the manufacturer that he’d buy all the chairs if they didn’t sell. Of course, he never had to make good on that offer, as the Ant Chair quickly became an international success. This is the authentic Ant Chair. Made in Denmark.
- An iconic chair by Danish designer Arne Jacobsen.
- Beautiful finish keeps the wood grain visible, making each chair unique.
- Stackable up to six high.
- Available with three or four legs.
- Made in Denmark.
- Brand
- Fritz Hansen
- General Dimensions
-
- 31.9" H 20.4" W 18.9" D
- Assembly
- Comes fully assembled
- Warranty
- 5-year warranty (terms and conditions may vary)

3 Leg
- Height (in): 30.31
- Width (in): 20.47
- Depth (in): 20.08
- Seat Height (in): 16.93

4 Leg
- Height (in): 31.9
- Width (in): 20.4
- Depth (in): 18.9
- Seat Height (in): 18.11
- Pressure-molded sliced veneer shell with outer layer in lazur-painted ash
- Tubular steel frame with polished chrome finish
Arne Jacobsen
Arne Jacobsen began training as a mason before studying at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, where he won a silver medal for a chair that was exhibited at the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Decoratifs. Jacobsen’s work remains appealing and fresh today, combining free-form shapes with the traditional attributes of Scandinavian design, material and structural integrity.
More on Arne Jacobsen