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Carlo Scarpa For Simon

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Delfi
By Carlo Scarpa, Marcel Breuer
Located in Milan, IT
Rectangular table in black marble white-veined. Designed by Carlo Scarpa and Marcel Breuer for
Category

Vintage 1970s Italian Dining Room Tables

Delfi
Delfi
$13,045
1970 "SAMO" Round Marble Dining Table by Carlo Scarpa for Simon, Italy
By Carlo Scarpa
Located in Le Grand-Saconnex, CH
marble, with spectacular veins and grain. Scarpa's reinterpretation of classical architecture is a
Category

Vintage 1970s Italian Post-Modern Dining Room Tables

Materials

Carrara Marble

Wide White Marble Dining Table by Carlo Scarpa / Simon Mid-Century Modern
By Studio Simon, Dino Gavina, Carlo Scarpa
Located in Mornico al Serio ( BG), Lombardia
SAMO is an wide, amazing dining table designed by Carlo Scarpa for Dino Gavina Simon spa. This
Category

Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Dining Room Tables

Materials

Marble

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Carlo Scarpa For Simon For Sale on 1stDibs

Choose from an assortment of styles, material and more with respect to the carlo scarpa for simon you’re looking for at 1stDibs. Frequently made of stone, wood and fabric, every carlo scarpa for simon was constructed with great care. You’ve searched high and low for the perfect carlo scarpa for simon — we have versions that date back to the 20th Century alongside those produced as recently as the 21st Century are available. Each carlo scarpa for simon bearing Mid-Century Modern or Modern hallmarks is very popular.

How Much is a Carlo Scarpa For Simon?

Prices for a carlo scarpa for simon start at $2,339 and top out at $34,000 with the average selling for $15,700.

Carlo Scarpa for sale on 1stDibs

Carlo Scarpa was born in Venice in 1906 and became one of the leading figures of architecture and international design during the 20th century. At merely 21 years old — and still a student at the Academy of Fine Arts — Scarpa began working as a designer for master Murano glassmaker M.V.M. Cappellin. Within a few years, he completely revolutionized the approach to art glass. 

In a short time, under the guidance of Scarpa, the Capellin furnace not only established itself as the top glass company, but above all it introduced modernity and international fame to Murano glassmaking. Scarpa created a personal style of glassmaking, a new vision that irreversibly changed glass production. 

The young Scarpa experimented with new models and colors: his chromatic combinations, impeccable execution and geometric shapes became his modus operandi. Thanks to Scarpa’s continuous research on vitreous matter, Cappellin produced a series of high-quality glass objects, that saw the company revisiting ancient processing techniques such as the watermark and Phoenician decoration. 

When he encountered the challenge of opaque glass, Scarpa proposed introducing textures of considerable chromatic impact, such as glass pastes and glazed glass with bright colors. Scarpa also collaborated in the renovation of Palazzo da Mula in Murano, the home of Cappellin. At the academy, he obtained the diploma of professor of architectural design and obtained an honorary degree from the Venice University Institute of Architecture of which he was director. 

In 1931, Scarpa's collaboration with Cappellin ended, following the bankruptcy of the company because it was not able to withstand the economic crisis linked to the Great Depression. But Scarpa did not go unnoticed by Paolo Venini — in 1933, the young designer became the new artistic director of the biggest glass company in Murano. 

Master glassmakers thought Scarpa's projects and sketches were impossible, but the passionate and curious designer always managed to get exactly what he wanted. Until 1947 he remained at the helm of Venini Co., where he created some of the best known masterpieces of modern glassmaking. Scarpa’s work with Venini was characterized by the continuous research on the subject, the use of color and techniques that he revisited in a very personal way, and the development of new ways of working with master glassmakers. 

At the beginning of the 1930s, "bubble", "half filigree" and "submerged" glass appeared for the first time on the occasion of the Venice Biennale of 1934. A few years later, at the Biennale and the VI Triennale of Milan, Venini exhibited its lattimi and murrine romane pieces, which were born from a joint idea between Scarpa and Paolo Venini. 

In 1938 Scarpa increased production, diversifying the vases from "objects of use" to sculptural works of art. In the same year he laid the foundation for the famous "woven" glass collection, exhibited the following year. In the subsequent years, Scarpa–Venini continued to exhibit at the Biennale and in various other shows their the "black and red lacquers," the granulari and the incisi, produced in limited series, and the "Chinese," which was inspired by Asian porcelain

Scarpa's creations for Venini garnered an international response and were a great success, leaving forever an indelible mark on the history of glassmaking. The last Biennale in which Carlo Scarpa participated as artistic director of Venini was in 1942. He left the company five years later. 

The time that Scarpa spent in the most important glass factory in Murano would attach a great artistic legacy to the company. His techniques and styles were resumed in the postwar period under the guidance of Tobia Venini, Paolo's son. In the 1950s, after the departure of Scarpa, Fulvio Bianconi was the new visionary at the Biennials with Venini.

On 1stDibs, vintage Carlo Scarpa glass and lighting are for sale, including decorative objects, tables, chandeliers and more.

(Biography provided by Ophir Gallery Inc.)