Primary Pouf
The Primary Pouf is a seating and side table solution for any environment, from Utopian to utilitarian settings. Designed by the same award-winning company that provided Rem Koolhaas’s Seattle Public
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The Primary Pouf is a seating and side table solution for any environment, from Utopian to utilitarian settings. Designed by the same award-winning company that provided Rem Koolhaas’s Seattle Public
Casting a new light on modern bentwood furniture, the unique Mag Table is formed by a continuous sheet of contoured wood, creating a sleek profile thats at home in any setting. It offers an inexpens
Whether placed bedside to provide a soft glow, used to dine on or used in a retail setting to display small objects, the Toto Cube Lamp (1996) functions dually as a lamp and a safe, washable table sur
Maurizio Peregallis Low Rack Side Table epitomize the kind of simple, straightforward sophistication that is equally at home among precious antiques as among mid-century icons. Made of finely crafted
A former apprentice to Constantin Brancusi, midcentury master Isamu Noguchi was no stranger to working with metal. The aluminum Prismatic Table (1957), the last piece of furniture that Noguchi designe
With its low, compact form, the Par 4 resembles a Japanese chabudai one moment and assumes the elegant, multiplaned outline of a Mondrian painting the next, exemplifying versatility and imagination. T
With the aim of designing furniture defined by sculptural, holistic structures, Eero Saarinen produced the Tulip Side Table as part of his iconic pedestal collection (1956). Crafted of a heavy aluminu
The Nexus Storage Cube serves as a stool, ottoman and side table as well as a mobile storage container. Its clean, geometric form contains a fully lined hollow interior for holding blankets, magazines
An award-winning sculptor and designer known for his proficiency with natural materials such as marble and wood, Giulio Lazzotti has created a pristinely elegant bench based on subtle sculptural nuanc
Patricia Urquiola’s T Table (2006) for Kartell, is a collision of shatterproof plastic and organic form, or as the designer calls it, “a technological fossil.” The T stands for transgenic, which speak