By De Puydt
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Heavy solid oak dining table attributed to Belgian maker De Puydt, featuring the robust, uncompromising construction characteristic of Belgian Brutalist furniture. The thick rectangular top sits on four substantial cylindrical legs that terminate in distinctive rounded, pointed feet with small metal glides. Pronounced oak grain runs across the top surface, with the amber-toned wood deepened through age. The design favors weight and materiality over ornamentation — no hardware, no decorative trim, just raw structural oak.
De Puydt was among the Belgian workshops producing heavy, craft-forward oak furniture during the 1960s and 1970s, a period when Brutalist principles extended from architecture into domestic furnishings across Belgium and the Netherlands. The emphasis on mass, natural materials, and honest construction reflected a broader regional design sensibility that pushed back against the slick refinement of Scandinavian modernism.
The table shows visible wear and fading to the top surface, consistent with age and use.
Shown with a matching set of 4 Brutalist Oak De Puydt dining chairs...
Category
1960s Dutch Mid-Century Modern Vintage Mark Cselovszki Tables