Do you find it intuitive that addition modulo 2 qualifies as associative? Do you find it intuitive that two-valued negation N can qualify as an isomorphism between concrete algebras ({0, 1}, X) and ({0, 1}, Y) where X and Y indicate binary operations? Well, if you answer yes to both questions, then if you let E-2 indicate logical equivalence, from the associativity of addition modulo 2 the negation isomorphism gives you that E-2 associates also.
In a paper called The Equivalential Calculus (you can read the paper in either of the volumes Polish Logic 1920-1939 or Jan Lukasiewicz: Selected Works) J. Lukasiewicz writes "Now, I long ago noted that equivalence is also associative, and accordingly I established the following thesis in the symbolism of Principia p≡.q≡r:≡:p≡q.≡r This thesis, which in my symbolism can be expressed by EEpEqrEEpqr, is cited by Tarski in his doctoral thesis of 1923...
A2. p≡.q≡r:≡:p≡q.≡r
The second axiom [A2] is the law of associativity for equivalence, discovered by myself."
Unfortunately though Lukasiewicz does not give any reference to any sort of paper where he first discovered this. So, I have no idea as to how he figured it out.
From a natural deduction framework, I do not think the associativity of logical equivalence intuitive at all, even if you know one particular natural deduction system fairly well. I tried to prove it once without any derived rules of inference, and then found a shorter proof. The shorter proof took up 141 lines. Someone else tried proving it with derived rules of inference, and proved one of the required conditionals in 47 lines.
In what gets called Lukasiewicz 3-valued logic logical equivalence takes on the value of truth along the diagonal, the value of falsity at the other corners not covered so far, and the third truth value elsewhere. In other words, where 0 indicates falsity, .5 the third truth value, and 1 truth we have the following matrix for logical equivalence E:
E 0 .5 1
0 1 .5 0
.5 .5 1 .5
1 0 .5 1
In reverse Polish notation logical equivalence goes pqrEEpqErEE. So, let p=.5, q=.5, and r=0. Then we obtain:
.5 .5 0 E E .5 .5 E 0 E E= .5 .5 E 1 0 E E=1 0 E=0.
So, in Lukasiewicz 3-valued logic, the associativity of logical equivalence can take on the falsity value "0" and thus doesn't even qualify as a quasi-tautology (a quasi-tautology never takes on the value of falsity, the law of Clavius CCNppp comes as a quasi-tautology in Lukasiewicz 3-valued logic).