Tavolino 915

Category
Coffee tables
Brands
Designers
Dimensions
L 59 cm - P 59 cm - H 49 cm
Finiture
Birch, Black lacquered, White lacquered
Year
1932
Coffee Table 915, designed by Alvar Aalto in 1932 for Artek, features a frame in solid birch bent into two elegant rings. The upper and lower shelves are made of pressed birch plywood. Lightweight and durable, this coffee table embodies the flowing lines typical of Aalto's style. Available with a frame in natural lacquered birch and shelves lacquered in black or white, Coffee Table 915 combines functionality and elegance, making it suitable for a variety of living environments.
Artek
Founded in Helsinki in 1935 by four young idealists: Alvar and Aino Aalto, Maire Gullichsen and Nils-Gustav Hahl, Artek was born with the aim of selling furniture and promoting a modern culture of living through exhibitions and other educational means. The company's name is a combination of the words "art" and "technology", fundamental concepts for the modernist movement of the 1920s that saw the connection between these two spheres as the innovation of modern design. Artek's collection consists of furniture, lighting and accessories designed by Finnish and international masters.
Alvar Aalto
Alvar Aalto was a Finnish architect, designer, sculptor and painter. Born in Kuortane in 1898, he graduated in architecture from the Technical University of Helsinki. His career was launched internationally by the Paimo Sanatorium in 1932, a building entirely designed by him and entirely furnished with furniture designed by him. In 1935 he founded the Artek furniture company in Helsinki with his wife Aino Aalto Marsio, with the aim of promoting the culture of housing. In this period he designed the "L-shaped" leg, a recognizable element of his furniture patented in 1933. From 1936, Aalto designed glass objects for the company, including the now iconic Aalto vase. In the 1950s and 1960s, Aalto received numerous honors and awards for his achievements, including the Royal Gold Medal for Architecture, awarded to him in 1957 by Queen Elizabeth II.