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      The essentials: 20 of the best sideboards

      The essentials: 20 of the best sideboards

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      Open House, in Milan 100 architecture and design venues open for a weekend

      Sideboard, Alexander Roux, 1863

      Richly decorated with carved reliefs, this sideboard includes an étagère for displaying dining ware and decorative objects. The model, designed in the United States by the French cabinetmaker Alexander Roux, was presented at the 1853 Crystal Palace Exhibition in New York.

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      Sideboard, Sviadocht Frères, 1930

      Art deco changed the look of sideboards, freeing the surfaces from any decoration and highlighting the different types of wood through noble veneers. The multifaceted geometric composition is also enhanced by the addition of contrasting materials, primarily chrome-plated metal for the handles.

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      Riflesso, Charlotte Perriand, Cassina, 1940-42

      Originally conceived for her Parisian flat at 130 boulevard du Montparnasse, Riflesso - part of the I Maestri di Cassina collection since 2004 and put back into production in 2014 - is a solid mahogany sideboard that makes the contrast between finishes its distinctive feature. The black lacquered structure enhances the enigmatic intensity of the piece, further accentuated by the contrast with the burgundy lacquered interior. The sliding doors and interior shelves are made of satin-finish aluminium, which by interacting with the surrounding environment creates a play of reflections. The production of sideboards and “enfilades” was very prolific for Perriand, both in the Le Corbusier years and in the years that followed. It allowed her to fine-tune the optimisation of domestic organisation, even for frugal spaces, without ever having to make compromises.

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      Architettura, Piero Fornasetti e Gio Ponti, Fornasetti, 1951

      One of Fornasetti’s most famous pieces, the Architettura trumeau reclaims the perspective rigor that characterized Renaissance architecture and reinterprets it in a surrealist key. Transposed onto the smaller scale of a piece of furniture, decorations of palaces and squares can be appreciated in all their subtlety, while by opening the doors, the piece of furniture becomes a spatial device that emphasises the three-dimensional rendering of space. Architettura was presented at the Milan Triennale in 1951.

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      Buffet, Ico and Luisa Parisi, La Permanente Mobili Cantù, ‘50s

      Although, as Gio Ponti points out, the “Cantù’s Cippendhale” is still a law upon itself in the field of Italian post-war furniture production, reconstruction fosters a strong linguistic renewal in the furniture sector. Ico and Luisa Parisi are among the most original interpreters of this. What distinguishes them is their taste for sculpted wood and the recurrence of the boomerang shape, which, starting from the legs, slims down the piece and sometimes embeds wall units and shelves.

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      Buffet, Finn Juhl, Spotti, 1955

      An emblem of Mid-Century style, this Finn Juhl buffet adds a note of experimentation by playing with the closed and open configurations of the piece of furniture. Once you slide open the right-hand door, a series of drawers reveal themselves in their unexpected scale from blue to white, inspired by Goethe’s colour wheel. The frame, made of burnished steel, is accompanied by slender legs that are characterised by a pleasant wooden covering.

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      Brasilia, Victor Wilkins, G Plan, 1960

      Manufactured by the English brand G Plan, Brasilia responds to a Mid-Century aesthetic, here revisited through the rounded curves of the supporting structure and handles. The piece, made of teak, follows a systemic logic that integrates other storage units in the same line.

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      Serie 4 D, Angelo Mangiarotti, Molteni, 1964

      The 4 D series consists of three compact sideboards, characterised by different door designs, conceived to be placed side by side to create a design that is more than a single piece. The structure is made of walnut wood with a marble top.

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      Bahut DF 2000, Cei-Raymond Loevy, Doubinski Frères, 1965

      An iconic product, thanks in part to its moulded methacrylate doors that incorporate the handles and give it a space age charm, the 2000 series sideboard was produced in a wide range of configurations - with different numbers of doors, different heights, with sled legs. A further variation on the theme is the use of colour, with monochrome versions, in shaded colours or with marked contrasts. The same series also includes a line of bedside tables, chests of drawers and desks.

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      Bramante, Kazuhide Takahama, Simon Gavina, Cassina, 1968

      A piece of furniture with a dry, sculpted elegance that, also thanks to its lacquered finish, takes on a timeless aura. This three-door buffet with lock is characterised by the bevelled profile of the side blocks, making it particularly suitable for being positioned in a corridor. Originally designed for Simon Gavina’s Ultrarazionale collection, it is now available in the Cassina catalogue.

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      Mb7, Luigi Caccia Dominioni, Azucena, 1970

      A monolithic presence that becomes fluid thanks to its semi-circular shape, Caccia Dominioni’s Mb7 thrives on small intriguing details, such as the chrome-plated metal structure that can be spotted at the base and between the doors, and the slightly protruding profile of the shelf, the only concession to the absoluteness of the shape.

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      Hommage to Mondrian, Shiro Kuramata, Cappellini, 1975

      After Saint Laurent’s Hommage to Mondrian, the world of design pays homage to the Dutch master by adapting the famous motif on a sideboard with an unusual square shape. The exaltation of abstraction developed by Kuramata is accompanied by careful research into functionality: each container space and, consequently, each door has a different shape to accommodate objects of different sizes.

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      Sheraton, Lodovico Acerbis and Giotto Stoppino, Acerbis, 1977

      Winner of the Compasso d’Oro in 1979, Sheraton stands out for its innovative sliding-rotating doors, which are positioned at the side of the cabinet. The combination of materials is also innovative: the structure is made of laminate, while the panels are made of precious wood or polyester gloss lacquer finishes.

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      Beverly, Ettore Sottsass, Memphis Milano, 1981

      A triumph of the expressive potential of laminate, Beverly transcends the veneer of many 20th-century sideboards through the juxtaposition of different textures. The shifting of the upper doors also contributes to destabilising the piece with irony, while a red lightbulb offers itself as a playfully unexpected presence.

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      Scrapwood cabinet, Piet Hein Eek, 2008

      A master of reclaimed design, Hein Eek has made the use of old wood his trademark. The signs of time are not concealed but enhanced through craftsmanship and a rigorous composition, attentive to the combination of colours and finishes, including, for some examples, his famous synthetic resin lacquer.

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      Mania cabinet, Alessandro Mendini, Design Gallery Milano, 2008

      A piece of furniture that takes on the value of a totem. The legs, two knurled half-cones, are echoed in the gold-plated brass upper cone, while the square storage compartment is decorated on the front with a series of small symbols arranged strictly in a grid. Inside, the upper cone reappears in a small size, suspended on two squares, generating an effect that is halfway between mysticism and alchemy. In a limited edition of 3 pieces.

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      Wrongwood, Sebastian Wrong e Richard Wood, Established & Sons, 2009

      The recycled wood of Piet Hein Eek’s furniture is revived through the graphic reproduction of artist Richard Wood, who together with Sebastian Wrong reinterprets the Mid-Century style in a pop way.

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      Evolution, Ferruccio Laviani, Emmemobili, 2010

      The morphing proposed by Ferruccio Laviani, who with Evolution merges in a single piece an Empire-style chest of drawers and a rationalist-inspired sideboard, is quite daring. The syncretism, baroque in style and bold in spirit, highlights a manufacturing savoir-faire capable of combining different craftsmanship techniques in a single piece of furniture.

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      Adrien, Vincent Van Duysen, Molteni, 2018

      Vincent Van Duysen’s sideboard’s purity of forms is made possible by its glass doors, which make this piece of furniture not a place to hide objects, but on the contrary to highlight them, also thanks to the built-in lamp.

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      Antigua, Luca Nichetto, Wittmann, 2021

      The Antigua series, consisting of three cupboards and sideboards of different sizes, is characterized by the design of the doors, which plays with the repetition of an abstract decorative motif in open chromatic contrast with the background. This detachment contributes to transforming the piece of furniture into an eye-catcher, while careful craftsmanship enhances the small details, such as the bevelled structure and the leather-covered handles.

       

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