Cassina
Constantin Coffee Table
Price € 3.196,00
A unique work, able to fascinate with the taste of a timeless design. It belongs to Ultramobile Collection by Cassina, the Constantin coffee table is a work between ancient and contemporary designed by Dino Gavina's Studio Simon as a tribute to the work of Constantin Brancusi. The beauty of this piece of furniture inspired by the pedestal of the works of the famous Romanian sculptor comes from two particular elements that can be mass-produced and combined into a whole that gives the entire structure an elegant sensation of movement and continuity. Constantin is made by a base in wood and a circular top in brass layer. A timeless object capable of enriching any type of environment with a particular taste as retro as contemporary, beautiful to look at and certainly capable of resisting the fashions of nowadays.
Ø 48 x H.59 cm
Salvioni Design Solutions delivers all around the world. The assembly service is also available by our teams of specialized workers.
Each product is tailor-made for the personal taste and indications of the customer in a customized finish and that is why the production time may vary according to the chosen product.
To discover the full range of services available, visit our delivery page.
Select
Select
Select
Founded in 1927 by the brothers Cesare and Umberto in the heart of Brianza furniture, Cassina is one of the long-lived Made in Italy industrial design companies. From the early ‘30s, Cassina brothers identified the strong demand for home furnishings and interpreted in a far-sighted way the renewed taste of the new emerging classes. From this intuition, Cassina started a real revolution in the indoor furnishings design. Since then, the company has been pursuing a path of research and innovation, involving prestigious designers and architects in the study of new furnishings models. In the last few years the collaboration with Gio Ponti has begun. Thanks to this partnership were born the 646 chair, known as Leggera, and the subsequent model 699 or Superleggera.Read more
Designed by
Dino Gavina
Dino Gavina (1922-2007) was one of the great protagonists of the Italian designer of the twentieth century. He was above all as an entrepreneur, having founded or contributed to founding numerous companies that went down in history: from Gavina spa (later sold to Knoll, who made it the heart of its European division Knoll International) to Flos, followed by Simon (today integrated into the Cassina) and the Paradisoterrestre gallery in Bologna. Gavina has left traces everywhere in the world of design, contributing to the creation of iconic products now scattered in the catalogs of many of the main brands in the sector and launching the careers of designers who have made the history of the discipline. Born in Bologna, he came to the world of design from the theatre, an area in which he dealt with staging and set design while Parallelo earned his living with his car accessories shop which also dealt in furnishing items, founded in 1953. He was the painter Lucio Fontana introduced him to design, introducing him to some personalities of the Milanese elite of the time such as Achille and Pier Giacomo Castiglioni. Other key meetings are those with the Japanese designer Kazuhide Takahama and with the great architect Carlo Scarpa, whom Gavina will want as president and leading designer of his Gavina spa, founded in 1960. The first product launched by Gavina was the Sanluca armchair by the Castiglioni brothers, today a great bestseller in the Poltrona Frau catalogue. Among the designers with whom he collaborated in his early years was also the great master of the Bauhaus Marcel Breuer, whom he met in New York in 1962. In the same year he founded Flos in partnership with Cesare Cassina, initially conceived as an experimental laboratory to create lamps with new materials polymers but destined to become the most famous lighting company in the world. A visionary and experimental figure, however, Gavina was not made for the management of large and complex large-scale enterprises: having sold Gavina to the Americans and leaving the shares of Flos, in 1968 he founded the new Simon brand together with his historic partner Maria Simoncini, dedicated to furniture of strong artistic and cultural value such as the Ultramobile collection whose products bear the signatures of the great names of surrealism of the 1930s such as Man Ray, Meret Oppenheim and Sebastian Matta. In 1973 he returned to the world of light, assuming the artistic direction of little Sirrah and bringing all his favorite signatures such as Takahama and Man Ray. Many of the most beautiful Sirrah products will then flow into the Nemo catalogue, while the company will be taken over by iGuzzini in the 1990s. Instead, the collaboration with Enzo Mari for the Metamobile collection dates back to 1974, a pioneer of the Ikea aesthetic of "Do It Yourself". His last major enterprise is Paradisoterrestre, founded in 1983 and initially dedicated to the creation of outdoor furniture and street furniture, but which evolved into a gallery that reissues many of the most famous pieces of Gavina's career, an attempt at an impossible sum of his inexhaustible oeuvre.
Read more