Sushi

DESIGN BY BARTOLI DESIGN, 2002

Beauty, technology and innovation: Sushi is a furnishing philosophy expressed in the shape of a table. Designed by Bartoli Design, our best-selling table sums up our poetic nature with its minimalist shape and sophisticated materials chosen for the top, including Pure-white laminate, Fenix-NTM®, DEKTON® by Cosentino, and glass. The frame and legs, made of 6x6cm drawn anodized aluminium are available in a contrasting colour or can be painted in the same colour as the top. Available in a fixed or extendable version, Sushi was created in 2002 and since then it has been constantly updated in its finishes and sizes, continuing to be our most popular table year after year.

Bartoli Design

Today, Bartoli Design, a team comprising Carlo, Paolo and Anna Bartoli, continues its experience in design and design culture begun by Carlo Bartoli in 1960, achieved through many partnerships with leading companies in the furniture sector. The studio’s research focuses on poetic elegance based on simplicity and balance: from the initial concept of product and communication strategies to creative and product development, the studio’s activities embrace a complete spectrum of design services. Bartoli Design also develops projects including architecture, settings, interior design and urban design. In 2008, Bartoli Design received the XXI Compasso d’Oro ADI award for the R606Uno chair, the Tube sofa received the IF Award for Good Industrial Design and the studio was selected to appear on a set of Italian postage stamps entitled “Italian Design for a New Domestic Landscape”. Carlo Bartoli has exhibited his work in Italy and abroad: at the Triennale Design Museum in Milan, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Stadt Museum in Cologne, as well as in New York, Prague, Hong Kong, Athens and Buenos Aires. The Gaia armchair is included in the permanent design collection at the MOMA in New York and the Triennale Design Museum in Milan. The 4875 chair is on display in the design collection at the National Arts Museum of the Pompidou Centre in Paris. The Breeze armchair, which received the I.D. Design Distinction Award, the Apex Product Design Award, the Red Dot and the IF Award for Good Industrial Design, is included in a set of Italian postage stamps entitled “Masters of Italian design”. The Sol table received the “2010 GOOD DESIGN Award”. The panel of judges of the Young&Design competition awarded Carlo Bartoli the Apostolo del Design 2012 for his work as a designer inspired by an essential and honest design project. The Still table by Bartoli Design received the Red Dot 2013 award.