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Designed by Mario Botta
The Zeta stool, designed by the architect Mario Botta, recalls the letter from which it takes its name: two square elements, serving as base and seat, are joined by a diagonal element secured by a comb joint at each end. Two diagonal leaves merge with this element, helping to strengthen its structure and giving the design a dynamic and rigorous balance. The result is an object with a strong graphic impact and a distinctive design, an expression of the formal research of Botta, focused on the relationship between horizontal and oblique lines. Strongly influenced by the principles of Gerrit Rietveld?s Neoplasticism, Zeta expresses a geometric rigour that translates the relationship betwe- en form, function and construction into an essential and recognisable graphic sign.
Variation
$2,650.00
Archetypal shapes in architectural geometry inspire these historical masterpieces._ Designed by the great contemporary architect from the Ticino canton for the interiors of some of his famous buildings, they have become classics in the Alias catalogue, icons of design made in Italy. Main features are the seats seconda, in perforated sheet steel.
$15,750.00$13,387.50
$2,440.00
$1,410.00
The SATURNO collection is enriched with two exclusive versions expressing the perfect stylistic vision of the architect from Ticino. Saturno table MB edition features a light grey MDF base with black edges, which supports an elegant acid-etched glass top, completed by a refined central extra-clear glass insert. Saturno 48 low table MB edition features an […]
$990.00
The Stage side table reveals the beauty of wood. The half concave suface is ideal as a functional container.
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Swan is a multifunctional piece of furniture: a single bent glass sheet that blends perfectly with other contemporary furnishing complements, also thanks to the possibility of choosing among several colour options.
$600.00$510.00
Once upon a time, small, useful objects existed in homes. For smoking rather than sewing, for serving rather than displaying: they dotted the living spaces. Giuseppe Chigiotti, in designing ?Ping,? thinks back to those now-obscure times.