Four-Door Sideboard in Sapelli Mahogany and Sycamore, Italian, circa 1960
Four-door sideboard in Sapelli mahogany and sycamore on a blackened wood base with brass elements. Italian work. Circa 1960.
W. 198 cm × D. 48 cm × H. 85.5 cm
PRODUCT DETAILS
| Dimensions en CM | 198 x 48 x 85.5 cm |
|---|---|
| Dimensions en INCH | 77.95 x 18.90 x 33.66 inch |
| Période | 1950–1960 |
| Style | Mid-Century Modern |
| Matériaux | Mahogany |
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
The sideboard — or credenza — occupies a central position in the canon of Italian mid-century modern design. In the decades following the Second World War, Italian furniture workshops produced pieces of extraordinary material refinement, in which the juxtaposition of exotic wood veneers, blackened bases and precisely detailed metal hardware became a defining formal language. From the great Milanese houses to smaller workshops in the Brianza region, a shared commitment to material quality and sophisticated proportion animated this output, producing pieces that distilled the optimism and elegance of Italy’s postwar renaissance.
This four-door sideboard exemplifies the tradition. The body, veneered in Sapelli mahogany — whose characteristic ribbon-stripe figure lends it a lustrous, almost shimmering surface — is set against panels in sycamore, the pale, close-grained wood adding a note of restraint to the composition. A blackened wood base lifts the case with graphic clarity, while brass elements provide a warm metallic accent calibrated against the interplay of light and dark in the veneers. At 198 centimetres in width, the piece unfolds as a composition of confident horizontal scale.
Italian mid-century sideboards of this formal and material quality are among the most consistently collected forms of postwar furniture. Their combination of craft refinement, formal assurance and material richness translates with particular ease into contemporary interiors, where they serve equally as functional storage and as enduring statements of aesthetic authority.
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