Contemporary and novel, the Cassina 511 Vetaglio Dining Table takes geometric shapes and refined edges and unites them in one sculpturally exquisite dining table.
Boasting a striking profile curated from enduring materials, its fan-shaped form consists of fourteen staves placed side-by-side, assembled by expert carpenters. Accommodating up to nine people, it is available in two finishes and is ideally utilised in a dining room for entertaining guests in style.
One of the most influential furniture designers of the early modern movement, Charlotte Perriand (1903-1999) introduced the 'machine age' aesthetic to interiors in the steel, aluminium and glass furniture she created at Le Corbusier's architectural studio in the late 1920s and 1930s.
Perriand also forged friendships with the gifted young architects and designers from all over the world who, like her, had jumped at the chance to work for Le Corbusier as an unpaid or, if they were very lucky, poorly paid assistant. Together with Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret, Perriand developed a series of tubular steel chairs, which were then (and are still today) hailed as icons of the machine age.