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Middle East - Sofas

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Item Ships From: Middle East
Pair of Venetian "Fan" Sofas with Mustard-Yellow Upholstery
Located in Dubai, AE
A pair of early 19th-century three-seater Venetian canape sofas, also commonly referred to as 'fan'-shaped sofas. The frames are carved from wood, with serpentine padded backrests an...
Category

Early 19th Century Italian Baroque Antique Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Fabric, Wood, Giltwood

Legend sofa
By PLYUS Furniture
Located in Dubai, AE
"Legend" sofa Materials: Wood, HR foam, polyester wadding, fabric upholstery. Dimensions: 320x115x95 cm. Seat H: 45 cm.
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Upholstery, Foam, Wood

MRS-1 sofa
By PLYUS Furniture
Located in Dubai, AE
“MRS 1” sofa. With love to the favorite designer of the 20th century, Vladimir Kagan. Materials: Wood, HR foam, polyester wadding, fabric upholstery Upholstery: Dedar Milano / Pier...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Upholstery, Foam, Wood

Croissant Sofa
By PLYUS Furniture
Located in Dubai, AE
“Croissant” Sofa. Of course, for the dessert we have all the most delicious and favorite pieces. Collection dedicated to the culture of food, love of food and the most popular dishe...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Fabric, Foam, Polyester, Wood

Hot-Dog Sofa
By PLYUS Furniture
Located in Dubai, AE
“HotDog” Sofa. Of course, for the dessert we have all the most delicious and favorite pieces. Collection dedicated to the culture of food, love of food and the most popular dishes i...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Upholstery, Foam, Polyester

Hug Green Sofa by Rejo Studio
Located in Geneve, CH
Hug green sofa by Rejo Studio. Dimensions: D 315 x W 95 x H 76 cm. Materials: wooden structure, with velvet. Also available in different colours. Long comfortable hug. The hug sofa...
Category

2010s Saudi Arabian Post-Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Velvet, Wood

Marshmallow Sofa by Rejo Studio
Located in Geneve, CH
Marshmallow sofa by Rejo Studio Dimensions: D 200 x W 85 x H 40 cm Materials: Chenille upholstery, wood structure. REJO is a design studio based in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and Ist...
Category

2010s Saudi Arabian Post-Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Upholstery, Wood

Hug Brown Sofa by Rejo Studio
Located in Geneve, CH
Hug Brown Sofa by Rejo Studio Dimensions: D 315 x W 95 x H 76 cm Materials: Wooden structure, with Velvet Also Available in different colours. Long co...
Category

2010s Saudi Arabian Post-Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Velvet, Wood

Monolithes, Meridienne by Marc Dibeh
By Marc Dibeh
Located in Geneve, CH
Monolithes - meridienne by Marc Dibeh 2018 Materials: Fabric, polished stainless steel Dimensions: W 160 x H 80 x D 65 cm Beirut based designer Marc Dibeh narrates his cultura...
Category

2010s Lebanese Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Stainless Steel

Hug Grey Sofa by Rejo Studio
Located in Geneve, CH
Hug grey sofa by Rejo Studio Dimensions: D 315 x W 95 x H 76 cm Materials: Wooden structure, with Velvet Also available in different colours. Long comfortable hug. The hug sofa...
Category

2010s Saudi Arabian Post-Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Velvet, Wood

Large Beveled, Couch by Marc Dibeh
By Marc Dibeh
Located in Geneve, CH
Large Beveled - Couch by Marc Dibeh 2021 Materials: Fabric Dimensions: W 300 x H 63 x D 80 cm Also Available: Large Beirut based designer Marc Dibeh narrates his cultural e...
Category

2010s Lebanese Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Fabric

Small Beveled, Couch by Marc Dibeh
By Marc Dibeh
Located in Geneve, CH
Small beveled - Couch by Marc Dibeh 2021 Materials: Fabric Dimensions: W 180 x H 63 x D 80 cm Also available: Large Beirut based designer Marc Dibeh narrates his cultural e...
Category

2010s Lebanese Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Fabric

Dimanche 6, Couch Vase by Marc Dibeh
By Marc Dibeh
Located in Geneve, CH
Dimanche 6, couch vase by Marc Dibeh 2018 Materials: Fabric. Dimensions: W180 x H70 x D180 cm. Beirut based designer Marc Dibeh narrates his cultural environment through compel...
Category

2010s Lebanese Post-Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Fabric

Red Couch by Marc Dibeh
By Marc Dibeh
Located in Geneve, CH
Red couch by Marc Dibeh Materials: Fabric Dimensions: W 290 x D90 x H65 cm Beirut based designer Marc Dibeh narrates his cultural environment through compelling interiors and p...
Category

2010s Lebanese Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Fabric

Cradle to Cradle Sofa by Neil Nenner and Avihai Mizrahi
Located in Geneve, CH
Cradle to cradle sofa by Neil Nenner and Avihai Mizrahi. Objects Dimensions: H 60 x L 200 x W 150 cm Materials: leather, iron, foam, rubber. Aviha...
Category

2010s Israeli Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Iron

Art Nouveau Sofa and Armchairs Labelled Jakob & Joseph Kohn
By Jacob & Josef Kohn
Located in Beirut, LB
Set of Art Nouveau sofa and two armchair by Jakob e Joseph Kohn, Wien. Bentwood solid walnut with an original upholstery in hand painted silk with typical ...
Category

Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Antique Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Bentwood

Related Items
Hand-Tailored Curved Sectional Sofa in Mustard Yellow Velvet
Located in New York, NY
Mid-Century Modern inspired sectional sofa featuring curved design with luxurious mustard yellow velvet fabric. Supported by walnut base. Standard dimensions: 293 cm x 157 cm x 84 cm...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Portuguese Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Velvet, Walnut

Set of Two Croissant Sofas by Raphael Raffel Leather and Bouclé 1970s
By Maison Honoré, Raphael Raffel
Located in Paris, IDF
Rare set of two small croissant sofas by Raphaël Raffel for Maison Honoré Paris made in the mid 1970s. The sofas have been fully resto...
Category

1970s French Mid-Century Modern Vintage Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Leather, Bouclé

Hug Sofa Upholstered, Chubby Arms by Rejo Studio
By REJO design studio
Located in Riyadh, SA
Long comfortable hug. The hug sofa features two welcoming chubby arms and a magical handy space for your books. This has been handcrafted at our studio. Part ...
Category

2010s Saudi Arabian Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Wool, Velvet

Hug Sofa Upholstered, Chubby Arms by Rejo Studio
Hug Sofa Upholstered, Chubby Arms by Rejo Studio
H 28.35 in W 114.18 in D 29.53 in
Rattan Sofa with Blue Upholstery
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Rattan sofa with new blue "handkerchief' inspired fabric. The sofa has been newly lashed and repaired and is in very good sturdy condition. Cushions are newly upholstered, they are s...
Category

20th Century Mid-Century Modern Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Fabric, Rattan

Rattan Sofa with Blue Upholstery
Rattan Sofa with Blue Upholstery
H 38 in W 72 in D 36 in
Raphael Raffel Croissant Sofa - Maison Honoré, Paris, 1970s
By Raphael Raffel
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Raphael Raffel Sofa, 1970s Newly reupholstered in an ivory wool bouclé by Pierre Frey.
Category

Mid-20th Century Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Foam

Carlo Scarpa Iroko Wood and Green Velvet Cornaro Sofa for Studio Simon, 1974
By Studio Simon, Carlo Scarpa
Located in Vicenza, IT
Cornaro two-seater sofa, designed by Carlo Scarpa and manufactured by Studio Simon in 1974. Made of Iroko wood, foam, and azure chenille velvet. Excellent vintage condition. Born in Venice on June 2nd, 1906, Carlo Scarpa began working very early. Only a year after he had first qualified as an architect in 1926, he began working for the Murano glassmakers Cappellin & Co. in a consultative capacity; from 1927, he began to experiment with the Murano glass, and this research not only gave him excellent results here but would also inform his progress for many years to come. Between 1935 and 1937, as he entered his thirties, Carlo Scarpa accepted his first important commission, the renovation of Venice’s Cà Foscari. He adapted the spaces of this stately University building which stands on the banks of the Grand Canal, creating rooms for the Dean’s offices and a new hall for academic ceremonies; Mario Sironi and Mario De Luigi were charged with doing the restoration work on the frescos. After 1945, Carlo Scarpa was constantly busy with new commissions, including various furnishings and designs for the renovation of Venice’s Hotel Bauer and designing a tall building in Padua and a residential area in Feltre, all worth mentioning. One of his key works, despite its relatively modest diminished proportions, was the first of many works which were to follow in the nineteen fifties: the [bookshop known as the] Padiglione del Libro, which stands in Venice’s Giardini di Castello and shows clearly Scarpa’s passion for the works of Frank Lloyd Wright. In the years which were to follow, after he had met the American architect, Scarpa repeated similar experiments on other occasions, as can be seen, in particular, in the sketches he drew up in 1953 for villa Zoppas in Conegliano, which show some of his most promising work. However, this work unfortunately never came to fruition. Carlo Scarpa later created three museum layouts to prove pivotal in how twentieth-century museums were set up from then on. Between 1955 and 1957, he completed extension work on Treviso’s Gipsoteca Canoviana [the museum that houses Canova’s sculptures] in Possagno, taking a similar experimental approach to the one he used for the Venezuelan Pavilion at [Venice’s] Giardini di Castello which he was building at the same time (1954-56). In Possagno Carlo Scarpa was to create one of his most incredible ever works, which inevitably bears comparison with two other museum layouts that he was working on over the same period, those of the Galleria Nazionale di Sicilia, housed in the Palazzo Abatellis in Palermo (1953-55) and at the Castelvecchio in Verona (1957- 1974), all of which were highly acclaimed, adding to his growing fame. Two other buildings, which are beautifully arranged in spatial terms, can be added to this long list of key works that were started and, in some cases, even completed during the nineteen fifties. After winning the Olivetti Award for architecture in 1956, Scarpa began work in Venice’s Piazza San Marco on an area destined to house products made by the Industrial manufacturers Ivrea. Over the same period (1959-1963), he also worked on renovating and restoring the gardens and ground floor of the Fondazione Querini Stampalia in Venice, which many consider one of his greatest works. While he worked on-site at the Fondazione Querini Stampalia, Carlo Scarpa also began building a villa in Udine for the Veritti family. To shed some light on how much his work evolved over the years, it may be useful to compare this work with that of his very last building, villa Ottolenghi Bardolino, which was near completion at the time of his sudden death in 1978. Upon completion of villa Veritti over the next ten years, without ever letting up on his work on renovation and layouts, Scarpa accepted some highly challenging commissions which were to make the most of his formal skills, working on the Carlo Felice Theatre in Genoa as well as another theatre in Vicenza. Towards the end of this decade, in 1969, Rina Brion commissioned Carlo Scarpa to build the Brion Mausoleum in San Vito d’Altivole (Treviso), a piece he continued to work on right up until the moment of his death. Nevertheless, even though he was totally absorbed by work on this mausoleum, plenty of other episodes can offer some insight into the final years of his career. As work on the San Vito d’Altivole Mausoleum began to lessen in 1973, Carlo Scarpa started building the new headquarters for the Banca Popolare di Verona. He drew up plans that were surprisingly different from the work he carried out simultaneously on the villa Ottolenghi. However, the plans Carlo Scarpa drew up, at different times, for a monument in Brescia’s Piazza della Loggia commemorating victims of the terrorist attack on May 28th, 1974, make a sharp contrast to the work he carried out in Verona, almost as if there is a certain hesitation after so many mannered excesses. The same Pietas that informs his designs for the Piazza Della Loggia can also be seen in the presence of the water that flows through the Brion Mausoleum, almost as if to give a concrete manifestation of pity in this twentieth-century work of art. Carlo Scarpa has put together a highly sophisticated collection of structures occupying the mausoleum’s L-shaped space stretching across both sides of the old San Vito d’Altivole cemetery. A myriad of different forms and an equally large number of different pieces, all of which are separate and yet inextricably linked to form a chain that seems to offer no promise of continuity, arising out of these are those whose only justification for being there is to bear the warning “si vis vitam, para mortem,” [if you wish to experience life prepare for death] as if to tell a tale that suggests the circle of time, joining together the commemoration of the dead with a celebration of life. At the entrance of the Brion Mausoleum stand the “propylaea,” followed by a cloister that ends by a small chapel, with an arcosolium bearing the family sarcophagi, the central pavilion, held in place on broken cast iron supports, stands over a mirror-shaped stretch of water and occupies one end of the family’s burial space. The musical sound of the walkways, teamed with the luminosity of these harmoniously blended spaces, shows how, in keeping with his strong sense of vision, Carlo Scarpa could make the most of all his many skills to come up with this truly magnificent space. As well as an outstanding commitment to architectural work, with the many projects we have already seen punctuating his career, Carlo Scarpa also made many equally important forays into the world of applied arts. Between 1926 and 1931, he worked for the Murano glassmakers Cappellin, later taking what he had learned with him when he went to work for the glassmakers Venini from 1933 until the 1950s. The story of how he came to work on furniture design is different, however, and began with the furniture he designed to replace lost furnishings during his renovation of Cà Foscari. The later mass-produced furniture started differently, given that many pieces were originally one-off designs “made to measure.” Industrial manufacturing using these designs as prototypes came into being thanks to the continuity afforded him by Dino Gavina, who, as well as this, also invited Carlo Scarpa to become president of the company Gavina SpA, later to become SIMON, a company Gavina founded eight years on, in partnership with Maria Simoncini (whose own name accounts for the choice of company name). Carlo Scarpa and Gavina forged a strong bond in 1968 as they began to put various models of his into production for Simon, such as the “Doge” table, which also formed the basis for the “Sarpi” and “Florian” tables. In the early seventies, other tables that followed included “Valmarana,” “Quatour,” and “Orseolo.” While in 1974, they added a couch and armchair, “Cornaro,” to the collection and the “Toledo” bed...
Category

1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Vintage Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Velvet, Foam, Chenille, Wood

Contemporary Modern Cassette Sofa in Fabric & Wood by Collector Studio
Located in Castelo da Maia, PT
Cassete sofa was designed by Alter Ego for Collector Studio. DIMENSIONS W 235 cm 92,5” D 95 cm 37,4” H 77cm 30.3” PRODUCT FEATURES Structure in Smoked Oak wood. Upholstered in f...
Category

2010s Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Fabric, Oak

Sofa with Tubular Frame and Beige Upholstery
Located in Waalwijk, NL
Sofa, fabric by Larsen, chrome-plated metal, Northern Europe, 1930s This sofa is designed according to the principles of the Bauhaus Movement. The design features a tubular frame ex...
Category

1930s European Bauhaus Vintage Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Metal, Chrome

Sofa with Tubular Frame and Beige Upholstery
Sofa with Tubular Frame and Beige Upholstery
H 24.02 in W 52.76 in D 34.26 in
Raphael Raffel Croissant sofa for Maison Honoré, Paris 1970s
By Raphael Raffel, Maison Honoré
Located in London, GB
Raphaël Raffel (1912-2000) studied at the École des Beaux Arts and became a renown interior designer from the 1940s to the end of the twentieth century. His shop in Paris attracted a...
Category

1970s French Vintage Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Leather

Three-Seater Sofa in Yellow Teddy Upholstery
Located in Waalwijk, NL
Three-seater sofa, teddy upholstery and beech, Europe, 1950s This voluptuous sofa is executed with wooden legs and a yellow teddy upholstery. The sofa has a high lined and slightly ...
Category

1950s European Mid-Century Modern Vintage Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Fabric, Beech

Three-Seater Sofa in Yellow Teddy Upholstery
Three-Seater Sofa in Yellow Teddy Upholstery
H 28.35 in W 79.53 in D 32.68 in
English Knole Sofa with Custom Upholstery
Located in New York, NY
English Knole sofa with custom upholstery. The sofa has rope and tassels wrapped around decorative walnut finials with hinged sides.
Category

1980s Vintage Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Upholstery, Walnut

Art Deco Sofa with Floral Upholstery
Located in Waalwijk, NL
Art Deco sofa, wood, fabric, France, 1940s This charming two-seat sofa comes with a delicate upholstery featuring a cream overtone decorated with an illustrative pattern of fauna an...
Category

1940s French Art Deco Vintage Middle East - Sofas

Materials

Fabric, Wood

Art Deco Sofa with Floral Upholstery
Art Deco Sofa with Floral Upholstery
H 40.56 in W 66.93 in D 33.47 in

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