Created from black onyx rolled sheet glass, the Lazare Vanity Mirror is a study in the tension between weight and light, translating architectural structure into an intimate scale. Its geometry is punctuated by the rhythmic gleam, offering a subtle indulgence in ornament that feels both elemental and storied. As a fragment of a larger material language, the mirror does more than reflect; it frames a quiet, modern ritual within a form that feels anchored in the history of the decorative arts.
This next chapter extends our practice to mirrors, low tables, and other objects, an evolution rooted in sculpture, material, and a deep commitment to process. It is a continuation of our language, translated into forms that reflect, hold, and frame space in new ways.
In this collection, we allow for a subtle indulgence in ornament—drawing from Kyōdai, the Japanese dressing stands known for their intimacy of scale and finely crafted compartments, and from Najeonchilgi, the Korean tradition of inlaying mother-of-pearl into lacquered wood.
Both traditions, shaped by ceremony and precision, guided us through our own ritual of study and distillation. What emerges are objects that carry the memory of these references, a gesture of fragility held in tension with structure.
Anchored in the values of the decorative arts, each piece is conceived as a fragment: architectural, elemental, and storied.
WEIGHT: 12LB (5.5KG)