Bean bag chair


The Sacco chair, also called bean bag chair, is a large fabric bag, filled with polystyrene beans, designed by Piero Gatti, Cesare Paolini and Franco Teodoro. The product is an example of an anatomic chair, as the shape of the object is set by the user.

History

Sacco was introduced in 1968 by three Italian designers: Piero Gatti, Cesare Paolini and Franco Teodoro. The object was created in the Italian Modernism movement. Being a post war era phenomenon, Italian modernism’s design was highly inspired with new available technology. Post war technology allowed an increase in the processes of production, by introducing new materials such as polystyrene. The idea of mass-produced goods made within an inexpensive price range appealed to consumers. It therefore created the need for a revolution in the creative and manufacturing process. ‘The designer was an integral member of a process that included marketing as well as engineering’. The inspiration left by Corradino D’Ascano’s Vespa design for the Piaggio Corporation in 1946, added value to the essence of the designer. With successful designs, brands could sell more products, and therefore the identity of the designer played an important advertising role. Another important figure of the Italian modernism period was Gio Ponti. Inspired by modernism's art movements, Ponti created new forms of objects. His asymmetrically balanced designs freed the Italian objects form their classic representations. The designer promoted Italian designs on famous exhibitions called 'Milan Triennale': "These exhibitions, organized as early as the 1920s … were responsible for increasing the visibility of Italian design in an international setting". After becoming an editor of the Domus in 1947, Ponti contributed to not only Italian design of that time, but also : “the human and creative element in modern industrial design as well as its practical, economic and social benefits."
Piero Gatti, Cesare Paolini and Franco Teodoro, inspired by their designer predecessors, came up in 1968 with the design of Sacco the ‘shapeless chair’. Although it was not the first design of an amorphous chair in Italian history, Sacco was the first successful product created in partnership with Zanotta. The predecessor of the product had a major design flaw of not being able to sustain its form and therefore never reached production. Sacco picked up that flaw and with the use of leather for exterior and right placed stitching. It is worth mentioning that the use of leather was not coincidental as at that time the textile was an Italian national pride product. The target user of the chair was the lax, hippie community and their non-conformist household. "In an era characterized by the hippie culture, apartment sharing and student demonstrations, the thirty-something designers created a nonpoltrona and thus launched an attack on good bourgeois taste."
Sacco is part of the permanent collection of the most important museums of contemporary art throughout the world, such as the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Centre Pompidou in Paris and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. Sacco was part of the 1972 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York Italy: The New Domestic Landscape - Achievements and Problems of Italian Design and was awarded, in 1973, the BIO 5 at the Biennale of Design in Ljubljana.
Piero Gatti, Cesare Paolini and Franco Teodoro established their architecture firm in Turin in 1965.

Exhibitions

Museum of Modern Art, New York: Italy: The New Domestic Landscape, 26 May - 11 September 1972
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, The Italian Metamorphosis,1943-1968, 7 October 1994—22 January 1995
Museum of Modern Art, New York: Architecture and Design: Inaugural Installation, 20 November 2004 - 7 November 2005
:es:Cité_de_l'Architecture_et_du_Patrimoine|Cité de l’Architecture et du Patrimoine, Paris: Architects’ Furniture: 1960–2020, September 2019

Collections

, New York
Israel Museum, Jerusalem
Uměleckoprůmyslové Muzeum, Prague
Kunstgewerbemuseum, Berlin
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Kunstmuseum, Düsseldorf
Museum für angewandte Kunst, Vienna
Taideteollisuusmuseo Konstindustrimuseet, Helsinki
Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris
The Saint Louis Art Museum, Saint Louis
Museo dell'arredo contemporaneo, Russi
Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe, Hamburg
Denver Art Museum, Denver
Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas
, Milan
Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Tel Aviv
Vitra Design Museum, Weil am Rhein
Musée National d'Art Moderne, Paris
Thessaloniki Design Museum, Thessaloniki
Brücke-Museum, Berlin
Fonds Régional d'Art Contemporain, Dunkerque
Centro Arte e Design, Calenzano
Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, Powerhouse Museum, Sydney
Museum voor Sierkunst en Vormgeving, Gent
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia
Shiodome Italia Creative Center, Tokyo

Awards

Bio 5 Ljubljana, Biennale of Design Ljubljana, 1973
Selected for the Compasso d'Oro Award, 1970
M.I.A.- Mostra Internazionale dell'Arredamento, Monza, 1968

Sacco in the media

Sacco often appears in the strips Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz.

Other bean bag chair products inspired by Sacco

Other designers have followed the "shapeless" chair design, creating a range of inspired products that take after Sacco. Amongst many, the most successful contemporary model would be Jukka Setala’s Fatboy. The product launched in 2002 brought the Finnish designer global recognition. The new form of the bean bag chair has less stitching and a more geometrical take in the means of shape. It also has an EPS filling which is more durable than PVC.