Side Tables, Support Tables and Tea Carts
Launch year: 2019
Material: Natural wood veneer and Metal
Dimensions: 123 x 55 x h71 cm
Two parallel planes remain suspended in the air connected by two central frames. This is the basic composition of the Malabares cart that gives the impression that its trays are in a constant balance challenge.
In summary, pure geometric shapes come together bringing the essentials of the tea cart that inhabits the collective imagination: support surfaces and displacement, which in this project are represented by two thin laminated wooden planes and two central large wheels that extrapolate conventional proportions.
Launch year: 2017
Material: Metal carbon steel and Stone quartz
Dimensions: Ø60 x h70 cm
The Magma side table presents the expressions of the stages which the earth goes through in a long process of sedimentation and erosion. The quartz reveals the marks of the freezing of the heat, of the sometimes violent processes of shocks, frictions, and calm periods so that we can have an idea of time represented in rock.
The carbon steel also brings the marks of time inherent to the formation of metals. Here it is presented in a fluid and delicate way in the same way of the liquid movement of the rock when super-heated into magma. Its structural strength supports the quartz plaque: time and heat.
Launch year: 2017
Material: Metal stainless steel
Dimensions: Ø60 x h70 cm
The Foz table presents the beginning of a journey, when the water breaks out and starts its own path at random. This route makes up the table's support bases, creating an aesthetic challenge of an apparent improvisation. Made of stainless steel, the Foz table recreates the natural movement of this material by revealing the fluid shapes it acquires when released by high temperature.
Launch year: 1991
Material: Corian
Dimensions: 74 x 36 x h65,5 cm
The Besame Mucho side table emerges from a single Corian plate.
A single trace in the air, draws curves, minimum supports and surface configure this piece. A creative expression that results in a functional and challenging balance.
Launch year: 2002
Material: Flat glass
Dimensions: Side table 60 x 60 / 70 x 50 / 70 x 70 / 80 x 40 / 80 x 80 x h50 cm | Support table 70 x 70 x h74 cm
The Pi table reveals glass as a flat possibility, aligns with minimalism through a T support.
The furniture is, but it does not impose itself, it provokes the eye in a game of absence and presence due to its translucency synthesized in three plates of flat glass.
The inspiration for the work in furniture comes from the invitation of the material itself to be able to transform itself from the liquid state into a geometric plate, and still remain close to its essence: the radical interaction with light.