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Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse

Table Fullhouse

Designer : India Mahdavi

Creation date : 2002

Materials : Walnut wood base and top.

Length (cm) : 400
Width (cm) : 130
Height (cm) : 72,50
Diameter (cm) : The post %%POSTLINK%% appeared first on %%BLOGLINK%%.
Capacity (cl) : The post %%POSTLINK%% appeared first on %%BLOGLINK%%.

Further information :
- Table with 12 modules.

Further information
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse
Visuel Table Fullhouse

India Mahdavi

French designer (1962 - )

India Mahdavi (born April 4th, 1962) is a French architect and designer of Iranian-Egyptian origin.

Since the beginning of her career in the 1990s, she has developed through her interior design projects a style associated with a certain vision of happiness and colour, which she has largely contributed to putting back on stage. Since then, her international success has led her to work with Maja Hoffmann, the Beaumarly group, the Valentino house, the Ladurée house, the Société des Bains de Mer de Monaco, Petite Friture, etc. But also Alber Elbaz, Adel Abdessemed. She designs private residences all over the world, from Paris to London, New York, Siwa to Egypt, Sydney, but also hotels, restaurants, shops. Her objects, starting with the Bishops, are part of the icons of contemporary decorative art.

India Mahdavi’s signature celebrates a cosmopolitan, polychrome party, influenced by cinema, as much as by design and art. Abstract prints and figurative motifs with pop accents exalt a nomadic culture, of which rue Las-Cases, with three addresses in Paris ( studio, showroom, small objects), is the epicentre.