Mexique Table
- Designer:
- Charlotte Perriand
- Brand:
- Cassina
Changes have been made to the following workplace policies in response to the COVID-19 coronavirus. Please make sure you’re familiar with the latest updates.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Pellentesque efficitur elementum ornare. Aliquam ac lacinia mi, id ultricies tortor. Fusce euismod, arcu sit amet consectetur tristique.
We don't appear to have any products related to your search term. Please try again.
Top: White Carrara marble or black Marquiña marble. Low gloss finishing.
Solid Oak wood frame transparent matt finishing with hand-woven Rattan mesh cane.
Currently available in just one size, the Rio low table was originally created by Charlotte Perriand as two. Between 1962, the year she designed the piece and 1967, Charlotte Perriand made a larger version intended for the Japanese embassy in Paris. The unusual beauty of the Rio table, matched by its functionality make it a veritable work of art. The six segments, made in solid wood, each with a different radius, offset from each other, create a jagged outer edge, while the hole in the centre evokes a centre of gravity. Cassina re-issued the original version in 1962, reproducing the original lines, thanks also to the extraordinary crafts skills of the artisans of Meda, a town in the Brianza area north of Milan.
Currently available in just one size, the Rio low table was originally created by Charlotte Perriand as two. Between 1962, the year she designed the piece and 1967, Charlotte Perriand made a larger version intended for the Japanese embassy in Paris. The unusual beauty of the Rio table, matched by its functionality make it a veritable work of art. The six segments, made in solid wood, each with a different radius, offset from each other, create a jagged outer edge, while the hole in the centre evokes a centre of gravity. Cassina re-issued the original version in 1962, reproducing the original lines, thanks also to the extraordinary crafts skills of the artisans of Meda, a town in the Brianza area north of Milan.