Clear Bubble Glass Decanter Signed Julio Santos 1970s Hand Blown Brutalist
Located in Melbourne, AU
Australian-Portuguese glass artist Julio Santos was an expert in his craft. This decanter is a
Vintage 1980s Australian Brutalist Glass
Art Glass
Clear Bubble Glass Decanter Signed Julio Santos 1970s Hand Blown Brutalist
Located in Melbourne, AU
Australian-Portuguese glass artist Julio Santos was an expert in his craft. This decanter is a
Art Glass
$3,272 / item
H 22.84 in Dm 22.05 in
Tortoise Torched Rattan and Salmon-Colored Anodised Aluminium Cocktail Table
By Tino Seubert
Located in London, GB
Originally created for a private commission, the cocktail table was manufactured in collaboration with a Philippines-based rattan manufacturer to produce a custom cocktail table. Th...
Aluminum
Early Handcrafted Signed Glass Vase by Michael Harris for MDina
By Mdina
Located in Dallas, TX
Early Handcrafted glass vase by Michael Harris for Mdina Glass on the Mediterranean Island of Malta. Signed Mdina on the base. Michael was inspired by the scenery of the island and t...
Glass
Set of Murano Glass Perfume Bottles
By Formia Murano
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Set of Murano glass perfume bottles, Made in Italy, 1960's. Some still have the original sticker. Dimensions: Large bottle: 11"H x 5.5"W x 2.5"D Smallest bottle: 4.75"H x 2"W x 2"D
Murano Glass
Mid-Century Malachite Vide Poche Ashtray, Italy, C.1950
Located in London, GB
Mid-century malachite vide poche ashtray, Italy, C.1950. In excellent condition commensurate of age.
Malachite
$271
H 2.56 in W 1.74 in D 0.87 in
Chinese Porcelain Snuff Bottle Blue & White Hand Painted, Circa 1940
Located in Lincoln, Lincolnshire
This is a good Chinese Export snuff bottle, made from porcelain and hand painted in cobalt blue, dating to the mid 20th century, circa 1940. This piece is well potted with a balus...
Porcelain
$320
H 9.88 in W 8.63 in D 2.63 in
Wooden Zodiac Capricorn Wall Plaque Relief Brutalist Midcentury, German, 1970s
Located in Nuernberg, DE
Beautiful wooden wall plaque relief sign, made in the Brutalist style in Germany in the 1970s. This is a wonderful Zodiac sign. This can be used as a Wall decoration or as a decorati...
Plywood
$3,600Sale Price|35% Off
H 17.33 in Dm 22.84 in
Very Large Brutalist Middle Eastern Ceramic Planter 1970s
Located in Melbourne, AU
This wonderful footed earthenware planter can be used as a vase or bowl. It presents as an impressive object in it's own right, or can be used as a plant pot holder. Based on ancie...
Earthenware
$222Sale Price|20% Off
H 1.78 in Dm 5.71 in
Small 1970s Azure Blue and Green Mdina Glass Bowl by Michael Harris
By Michael Harris, Mdina
Located in Glasgow, GB
A small round glass bowl crafted in the early 1970s by Michael Harris. This particular piece is one of Harris's early works for Mdina, making it a rare piece of glass history. It ...
Art Glass
$375 / set
H 5.91 in W 2.37 in D 3.94 in
Pink Palm Trees Candlesticks Hand Painted Made in Italy Set of 2
By Bertrando Di Renzo
Located in ROCCAVIVARA CB, IT
Light up your table with our palm trees candlestick. Size: small 15cm Size: medium 25cm.
Ceramic
Sold|$1,113
H 2.05 in Dm 11.62 in
An opalescent glass plate "Poisson N°1" by René Lalique, made in France ca. 1931
By René Lalique
Located in Aachen, DE
An opalescent glass plate "Poisson N°1" by René Lalique, made in France ca. 1931. Molded signature "R.LALIQUE". Cf.: Marcilhac F., R. Lalique: Catalogue Raisonné de l'oeuvre verre, l...
Glass, Art Glass, Blown Glass, Opaline Glass
$1,209
H 9.26 in W 6.7 in D 2.76 in
A Murrine Vase by Marco and Mattia Salvadore, made on Murano ca. 2017
By Marco & Mattia Salvadore, Studio Salvadore
Located in Aachen, DE
A cute Murano glass vessel with Murrine, made by Marco and Mattia Salvadore and their team at Studio Salvadore on Murano ca. 2017. A mosaic of transparent canes and murrine, fused an...
Glass, Art Glass, Blown Glass, Cut Glass, Murano Glass, Murrine
$5,327Sale Price|20% Off
H 55.12 in W 17.72 in D 17.72 in
Kalmar 'Tulipan' Chandelier Pendant Light, Blown Glass 1970
By J.T. Kalmar
Located in Oirlo, LI
This stunning glass pendant chandelier, model 'Tulipan,' was designed by J.T. Kalmar and produced in Vienna, Austria, during the late 1960s to early 1970s. Its name, 'Tulipan,' is ...
Blown Glass
Robert Wynne Colorful Studio Glass Vase (1994)
Located in New York, NY
Australian born glass artist, Robert Wynne is known for his innovative techniques and unique approach to glassblowing. Like this stunning vase, his work often features vibrant colors...
Art Glass
$992Sale Price|81% Off
H 15.95 in W 14.18 in D 7.09 in
Monumental Signed Shunichi Inoue White and Rose Ash Glazed Vase 1978
By Shunichi Inoue
Located in Melbourne, AU
An exceptional example of the work of master Japanese potter, Shunichi Inoue. This vessel dates from his Australian residency and is signed and dated 1978. There is potency in this ...
Earthenware
Collection of Three Art Glass Perfume Bottles
By Glass Act
Located in Asheville, NC
This set of three beautiful handblown art glass perfume bottles are the work of the "Glass Act Studio" of Taiwan. The two outermost bottles feature a gorgeous flashed iridescent colo...
Art Glass
20th Century Italian Sterling Silver Chiocolate Pot
By Ferrari silversmith
Located in VALENZA, IT
Baroque style sterling silver chocolate pot. The object was completely handmade in Italy by the silversmith Lorenzo Ferrari who had the laboratory in Milan in via XXV Aprile. The...
Sterling Silver
The design of brutalist furniture encompasses that which is crafted, hewn and worked by hand — an aesthetic rebuke (or, at least, a counterpoint) to furniture that is created using 21st-century materials and technology. Lately, the word “brutalist” has been adopted by the realms of furniture design and the decorative arts to refer to chairs, cabinets, tables and accessory pieces such as mirror frames and lighting that are made of rougher, deeply textured metals and other materials that are the visual and palpable antithesis of the sleek, smooth and suave.
ORIGINS OF BRUTALIST FURNITURE DESIGN
CHARACTERISTICS OF BRUTALIST FURNITURE DESIGN
BRUTALIST FURNITURE DESIGNERS TO KNOW
VINTAGE BRUTALIST FURNITURE ON 1STDIBS
The term brutalism — which derives from the French word brut, meaning “raw” — was coined by architecture critic Reyner Banham to describe an architectural style that emerged in the 1950s featuring monumental buildings, usually made of unornamented concrete, whose design was meant to project an air of strength and solidity.
Le Corbusier essentially created the brutalist style; its best-known iterations in the United States are the Whitney Museum of American Art, which was designed by Marcel Breuer, and Paul Rudolph's Yale Art and Architecture Building. The severe style might have been the most criticized architectural movement of the 20th century, even if it was an honest attempt to celebrate the beauty of raw material. But while the brutalist government buildings in Washington, D.C., seemingly bask in their un-beauty, brutalist interior design and decor is much more lyrical, at times taking on a whimsical, romantic quality that its exterior counterparts lack.
Paul Evans is Exhibit A for brutalist furniture design. His Sculpture Front cabinets laced with high-relief patinated steel mounts have become collector's items nonpareil, while the chairs, coffee table and dining table in his later Cityscape series and Sculpted Bronze series for Directional Furniture are perhaps the most expressive, attention-grabbing pieces in American modern design. Other exemplary brutalist designers are Silas Seandel, the idiosyncratic New York furniture designer and sculptor whose works in metal — in particular his tables — have a kind of brawny lyricism, and Curtis Jere, a nom-de-trade for the California team of Curtis Freiler and Jerry Fels, the bold makers of expressive scorched and sheared copper and brass mirror frames and wall-mounted sculptures.
Brutalist furniture and sculptures remain popular with interior designers and can lend unique, eccentric, human notes to an art and design collection in any home.
Find authentic vintage brutalist chairs, coffee tables, decorative objects and other furniture on 1stDibs.
Over time, many different styles of vintage, new and antique bottles have found second lives as coveted decorative objects in pristine display cases all over the world. Originally, these bottles may have been decanters and flasks for spirits and liqueurs, medicine and perfume bottles or functional vases for fresh floral arrangements.
We know that glass can be a radical art form. So your vintage art glass or Art Deco pieces will stand on their own to be admired by all alongside your other treasured collectibles in your living room or dining room. But maybe you’re thinking about decorating elsewhere in your home with the other types of glass bottles that you’ve picked up over the years.
There are many corners of your space that can be brightened by an arrangement of bottles of various sizes, shapes and colors. Spruce up your kitchen, bedroom, craft room or art studio by lining the window sill with an array of glass bottles. In this case, you’ll want to use glass bottles instead of ceramic or metal, as transparent material in the sunlight — particularly colored bottles — will introduce energy and pops of color to adjacent walls and surfaces.
Grouping short, tall, thin and wide bottles — some with flowers, some without — on a tabletop, buffet or desk in your home office can bring a much-needed dynamic as a centerpiece or merely dress up a workspace.
On 1stDibs, find a collection of vintage, new and antique glass bottles that includes mid-century modern bottles, Murano glass and more.