Sarpi Dining table by Carlo Scarpa

Carlo Scarpa designed this masterpiece of a table in 1974, as a successor to the Doge, which is included in the collection known as Ultrarazionale. While citing some of the same material characteristics as its predecessor, the base of the Sarpi is up ended compared to the Doge, while the entire piece is smaller so it can fit into smaller spaces. The drawn bushed metal frame is lacquered over with protective transparent gloss and held together with visible burnished screws. The octagonal shape glass rests over the brass-plated base. This early version was not produced by Cassina but is an all original 1970s production piece manufactured by Simon.

  • Designer: Carlo Scarpa
  • Manufacturer: Simon International
  • Year: 1970's
  • Origin: Italy
  • Dimensions: W 132, L 213, H 72
  • Condition: Excellent
  • Designer

    Carlo Scarpa (2 June 1906 – 28 November 1978) was an Italian architect, influenced by the materials, landscape and the history of Venetian culture, and by Japan. Scarpa translated his interests in history, regionalism, invention, and the techniques of the artist and craftsman into ingenious glass and furniture design

    From architecture to works in glass, from design projects to preparing museum exhibitions, the work of Carlo Scarpa has always stood out in the unmistakable way in which it manages to bring together his love for materials, his attention to detail and his masterly elaboration of organic and Wrightian poetics. Architect, designer and artist, Scarpa left the Venice Academy of Art in 1926 and began professional work, but continued to visit craftsmen’s’ workshops and Venetian master glassworkers. For twenty years, right up until the second half of the Forties, he received numerous commissions to design, convert prepare buildings.

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