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Tables

BEDSIDE, YARA BY SÉRGIO RODRIGUES, BRAZIL, 1960s

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Elegant bedside table, model Yara, designed by Sergio Rodrigues in the 1960s.

Crafted from solid jacaranda wood with a glass top, this piece reflects the designer’s mastery in highlighting noble materials and clean, refined lines. It features a small drawer and an open shelf, offering functionality with visual lightness.

It stands out for its simple and timeless design, where the solidity of the wood is balanced by the transparency of the glass, creating a discreet yet sophisticated presence. A piece of high-quality craftsmanship, designed to endure and age with character.

Restored piece

Dimensions: L52cm x W33cm x H65cm

 

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Sérgio Rodrigues (1927–2014), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Sérgio Rodrigues is one of the most significant figures in Brazilian design and architecture, responsible for developing a personal language that helped define the identity of modernist furniture in Brazil.

As Maria Cecília Loschiavo dos Santos (design historian and professor at the University of São Paulo) writes, “of all Brazilian designers, Sérgio Rodrigues is perhaps the most deeply committed to the values and materials of the land, having rooted himself in forms and patterns of Brazilian culture.” This reading helps reveal the essence of his work: a modernity that does not detach itself from its roots, but emerges from them.

Rather than following an international style, he sought to translate Brazil into form, material, and function. His work stems from a profound relationship with local materials and ways of living, naturally integrating architecture, design, and drawing into a single continuous practice.

His work emerges at a pivotal moment in Brazilian culture — the construction of Brasília, the rise of Bossa Nova, and Cinema Novo — when the country was experiencing a collective drive toward invention and modernity. Sérgio understood that modernist architecture needed furniture capable of matching this new sensibility: freer, more comfortable, and more attuned to Brazil’s climate and body. Wood, leather, and generous forms became his language.

In 1955, he founded Oca, a space that functioned simultaneously as factory, studio, and gallery. More than a company, Oca expressed a vision: to bring tradition and modernity closer together through an idea of essential simplicity, almost archetypal, inspired by the indigenous house.

Throughout his career, he developed around 1,200 furniture pieces, mostly chairs, as well as works created for landmark interior projects such as the University of Brasília, the Brazilian Embassy in Rome, Palácio dos Arcos, the National Theatre of Brasília, and the Bloch publishing house.

His design pieces broke away from the rigidity of formal seating, introducing a new relationship with the body — more relaxed, informal, and sensorial. The most iconic among them, the Mole Armchair (1957), embodies this vision: a structure in turned wood, leather straps, and generous cushions that invite deep relaxation, evoking the informality of the traditional Brazilian hammock.

The Mocho stool (1954) also reflects this pursuit of formal synthesis and constructive intelligence, reducing the object to its essence without losing character.

Sérgio Rodrigues’ work remains one of the most consistent expressions of rooted Brazilian modernism — not as an imitation of international movements, but as a personal interpretation of a way of living.

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