Set Of 5 Claustra Room Dividers By Mylene Niedzialkowski
$5,878
1st Dibs
Set Of 5 Claustra Room Dividers by Mylene NiedzialkowskiDimensions: W 12 x H 230 cm (each unit).Materials: Beech wood, golden steel wire and brass.Different lenghts available: 6 pieces per module (100 cm), 9 pieces per module (150 cm), 12 pieces per module (200 cm) and 15 pieces per module (230 cm). The colors can differ and make each piece unique. Please contact us. Inspired by room dividers and certain bas reliefs from the 70s in the vast halls, Claustra is a string of wooden modules strung on a weighted metal cable. Sold "by the stem", Claustra is at its best when played in accumulation, as in the photos. It can be used as a room divider or as a wall decoration. Beech from eco-managed forest on steel cable, brass weight. Modules are 12cm wide. Hanging hook provided. Claustra is made at the Château de Méritein, our Béarnaise factory. The elements are varnished then mounted on cable.All our collections start from an exploration, from a curiosity for the material, from the discovery of the gesture to work it, from the application to master it and finally, from the care to arrive at the object that you discover while browsing these pages. Georges adorns himself with rare fibers and raw materials to carefully manufacture, entirely by hand, sincere objects and other numbered masterpieces, always in a reasoned approach.All our objects and lights are handmade in our factory in Béarn, in Méritein. In this castle, our teams use simple and raw materials sourced as close as possible and transformed on site. A manufacturing process that is economical in resources, generous in know-how and respectful of the environment.At the basis of each object, there is a permanent desire to experiment. To understand matter, its constraints, its properties. And to transform it, taking care to only work on it as minimally as possible.From this desire to leave the raw material as raw as possible, Mylene Niedzialkowski draws and designs pieces with minimal lines, with singular and assertive irregularities.Sailing between the South West of France and Paris, fascinated by arte povera and popular arts, Mylene Niedzialkowski strives to accumulate local raw materials in her workshop, from neighboring regions, basic and common materials, ordinary and daily, both household and industrial or even from production residues. From this collection which oscillates between material library and cabinet of curiosities, simple objects with clean lines are created, sometimes everyday, sometimes with an essentially decorative function.