Varier Peel Club Ergonomic Swivel Chair
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Ref: A-025
- Designer
- Olav Eldoy
- Manufacturer
- Varier
- Period
- 2000s
- Origin
- Norway
- Materials
- Metal, Fabric Upholstery
- Color
- Black
- Condition
- Good — fabric and mechanism in working order
- Height
- 77 cm
- Width
- 83 cm
- Depth
- 74 cm
- Seat height
- 43 cm
The Varier Peel Club belongs to a small family of chairs that manage to be both deeply comfortable and visually arresting. Designed by Olav Eldoy for the Norwegian manufacturer Varier — a company that has spent decades rethinking the relationship between the human body and the act of sitting — the Peel Club takes their philosophy of active sitting and wraps it in a form elegant enough for a living room.
The chair's silhouette is unmistakable: a sculptural, organic shell that cradles the sitter from multiple angles, mounted on a sleek sled base that allows a full three-hundred-and-sixty-degree swivel. The innovative tilting mechanism responds to your body weight and movement, encouraging subtle shifts in posture that keep your spine engaged rather than static. It is ergonomics without the clinical look — a chair that belongs in a design magazine as much as in a physiotherapy handbook.
This example is upholstered in a dark fabric and sits on a polished metal sled base. The mechanism operates smoothly, the upholstery shows normal use, and the overall structure is solid and well-maintained. The chair measures seventy-seven centimeters high, eighty-three wide, and seventy-four deep, with a seat height of forty-three centimeters — generous proportions that accommodate a wide range of body types.
Varier grew out of the Stokke furniture company and the balans concept pioneered by Peter Opsvik in the 1970s. Their chairs — from the Variable balans kneeling chair to the Gravity recliner — share a conviction that sitting should be dynamic, not passive. The Peel Club represents the most refined expression of this philosophy: a chair that works for your body while looking like it was designed purely for pleasure.
In a living room, a reading corner, or even a hotel lobby, the Peel Club commands attention without demanding it. It is the kind of Scandinavian design that rewards daily use as much as it rewards the first glance — form and function in genuine, unforced balance.