See more objects with the tag modernism, seating, curvilinear, cantilever, Kem Weber.

Object Timeline

  • We acquired this object.

1935

  • Work on this object began.

2015

2017

2025

  • You found it!

Airline Chair

This is a chair. It is dated 1935. Its medium is birch, ash, naugahyde, steel tacks. It is a part of the Product Design and Decorative Arts department.

In 1927 Kem Weber opened his own industrial design studio in Hollywood where he conceived of this Airline chair. One of the strongest statements in American furniture of the streamlined style, the Airline chair has a raked profile and an angular frame whose arm supports and armrests reach forward while the chair’s elongated seat and low back appear ready to launch their sitter into the sky. In its name and style, the chair associated itself with the latest developments in modern transportation. The sculptural quality of the plywood arms and armrests can also be interpreted as a precursor to the biomorphic furniture of Charles and Ray Eames.

With this chair Weber aimed to marry comfort, beauty, utility and affordability. The designer conceived of the chair for mass-production and the first models were constructed in collapsible parts so that they could be assembled at home. Unable to secure a manufacturer, Weber founded the Airline Chair Company and produced the chairs, likely in collaboration with a local cabinetmaker, according to the specifications of particular orders. Disney ordered about three-hundred upholstered Airline chairs in 1935 for use in their studio offices and screening rooms at their Burbank animation studios, for which Weber was the project architect.

This object was donated by George R. Kravis II. It is credited Gift of George R. Kravis II.

  • Long Chair Chair
  • birch (frame), birch-faced plywood (seat).
  • Museum purchase through gift of George R. Kravis II, Anonymous Donor, and....
  • 2013-17-1

Our curators have highlighted 6 objects that are related to this one. Here are three of them, selected at random:

  • B5 Side Chair
  • bent chrome-plated tubular steel, eisengarn (parafin treated cotton canvas).
  • Museum purchase from General Acquisitions Endowment Fund.
  • 2007-9-1
  • B3 Chair
  • chrome-plated tubular steel, canvas.
  • Gift of Gary Laredo.
  • 1956-10-1-a,b

Its dimensions are

H x W x D: 78.1 × 62.2 × 86.4 cm (30 3/4 in. × 24 1/2 in. × 34 in.)

It has the following markings

"8037" [in cream paint]/" [illegible] E-15" [in red crayon], on underside of seat

Cite this object as

Airline Chair; birch, ash, naugahyde, steel tacks; H x W x D: 78.1 × 62.2 × 86.4 cm (30 3/4 in. × 24 1/2 in. × 34 in.); Gift of George R. Kravis II; 2018-22-28

This object was previously on display as a part of the exhibition The Jazz Age: American Style in the 1920s.

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If you would like to cite this object in a Wikipedia article please use the following template:

<ref name=CH>{{cite web |url=https://www-4.collection.cooperhewitt.org/objects/404536651/ |title=Airline Chair |author=Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum |accessdate=9 March 2025 |publisher=Smithsonian Institution}}</ref>