The Brick Screen, designed by Eileen Gray for ClassiCon, is much more than a simple room divider: it is a modular work of art. Composed of a series of rectangular lacquered panels, connected by invisible hinges, this iconic piece plays with volumes, light and shadow, creating a dynamic and sculptural effect. Its flexibility allows you to redefine spaces with elegance and functionality, adapting to any environment.
ClassiCon
An internationally renowned company, ClassiCon re-edits great classics of modern design and at the same time promotes the production of new ones: furniture with a classic taste but at the same time with a look to the future. The brand stands for quality, individuality and a timeless taste, impervious to passing fashions. ClassiCon continually looks to new talented young designers such as Konstantin Grcic, with whom it has established a long and continuous collaboration.
Eileen Gray was an Irish designer and architect, as well as a pioneer of the Modern Movement in architecture. Born in Enniscorthy in 1878, she studied drawing and painting in London until she discovered her passion for lacquered furniture in a shop in Soho, which led her to move to Paris in 1907 to study with Seizo Sugawara, a Japanese master of the wood lacquering technique. Driven by her fellow architect Jean Badovici and Le Corbusier, Eileen began studying architecture in 1924: the result was her most emblematic work, Villa E-1027 in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, on the French Riviera.