video corpo

Wall-mounted mirror BROKEN
free-standingcontemporaryrectangular

wall-mounted mirror
wall-mounted mirror
wall-mounted mirror
wall-mounted mirror
wall-mounted mirror
wall-mounted mirror
wall-mounted mirror
wall-mounted mirror
wall-mounted mirror
wall-mounted mirror
wall-mounted mirror
Add to favorites
Compare this product
 

Characteristics

Type
wall-mounted, free-standing
Style
contemporary
Shape
rectangular
Frame material
polyurethane
Color
black, white, gray
Orientation
vertical
Height

200 cm
(79 in)

Width

100 cm
(39 in)

Depth

20 cm
(7.9 in)

Description

Broken Mirror is mirror that does not abandon its function, but enriches and transforms it, by becoming an object of art and going beyond the boundaries of direct form-function correspondence. The project was born from the encounter between Gufram's – the most radical brand of Italian design – will to experiment, and the unmistakable planning figure of the New York duo Snarkitecture, who investigates the boundaries between art and architecture with the same curiosity of the first Italian radical designers from the Sixties and Seventies. The reflecting surface is surrounded by a frame of soft polyurethane – a direct reference to Gufram's material par excellence – which is shaped like a break in the wall, a crack that reflects the surrounding space and at the same time creates an alienating optical effect, as if the room opened to the outside world or another environment. The polyurethane frame creates an alienating optical effect and gives life to another dimension Thus Broken Mirror is a project that ironically plays with a misunderstanding, leveraging on the concept of "soft/non soft", besides highlighting the main characteristic of the mirror, which is that of reflecting the world standing in front of it, but also of creating a new and parallel one.

Catalogs

*Prices are pre-tax. They exclude delivery charges and customs duties and do not include additional charges for installation or activation options. Prices are indicative only and may vary by country, with changes to the cost of raw materials and exchange rates.