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    V-Dining Chair, Arno Declercq
    Quantity
    5,324
    Sublight, Light Suspension by Roland de Mul
    Quantity
    4,400
    Mandolin Brass Sconce, Carla Baz
    Quantity
    3,960
    Der Stein, Wooden Coffee Table by Kaspar Hamacher
    Quantity
    6,380
    Proportions of Stone Shelf 01 by Lee Sisan
    Quantity
    39,600
    Dot Chair, Hand-Sculpted and Signed by Cedric Breisacher
    Quantity
    3,300
    Eden Brass Floating Vase by Agustina Bottoni
    Quantity
    660
    Oyster Brass Turquoise Sconce, Carla Baz
    Quantity
    4,070
    White Curl Up Lounge Chair by kar
    Quantity
    2,850
    Stal Chair by Lucas Tyra Morten
    Quantity
    3,850
    Black Stone and Brass Stoique Stole Console Signed by Frédéric Saulou
    Quantity
    10,750
    Unique Sculpture Signed by Jörg Pietschmann
    Quantity
    2,860
    Total:
    90,864

    Geology of Diverse N°1 by Estudio Rafael Freyre

    11,220

    In stock

    Quantity
    SKU: Deco-Geology of Diverse-Freyre1 Category:

    Additional information

    Weight 90 kg
    Dimensions 60 × 87 × 25 cm
    Designers

    Dimensions (CM)

    60 x 87 x 25 cm

    Dimensions (Inches)

    23.6 x 34.2 x 9.8 in

    Materials

    Edition

    Limited Edition

    Lead time

    7-8 Weeks

    Additional Information

    Made to order creations can be done: please contact us for any request.

    Materials: Diverse recycled Andes stones

    In Geology of the Diverse the pieces form a territory or place we can access with our body and relate to its unfinished state, open, in constant transformation. The circular shape resembles the earth’s crust made up of layers of various minerals that revolve around a nucleus that attracts them. The geological layers are the skins of an organism that is in constant movement and transformation.
    In the small fragments of local stones -material considered mostly as waste by big industry- we see the opportunity to build a new geology and recreate, in a handmade way, the history of the territory we inhabit. By joining fractions of stones from different origins of the Andes, we reorganize a territory and time that, in some way, we had fragmented. This process tells us about the interactions between different heights and geographies, as well as the correspondence between the rapid transformation that man makes of his habitat in the face of the slow geological processes that have been taking place for thousands of years and are visible in the earth’s crust.