Serving trolley - Three Trays - Wood, Bronze - With Wheels






Holds a bachelor's degree in history of art and architecture, with 12 years of experience in decorative arts.
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Description from the seller
It is a serving cabinet that breathes that early Modernist spirit, still keeping the artisanal elegance of the 19th century, but already pointing toward the lightness and the sensuality of curvilinear forms. The structure, in dark, warm wood, rises with a wavelike rhythm: the sides seem to sketch a small arabesque, as if the piece wanted to move on its own.
Each shelf shows a cutout edge, almost floral, that softens the geometry and gives it that organic air so characteristic of Modernism.
The brass details —the upper finials, the escutcheons that embrace the uprights, the small, bright wheels— provide a luminous contrast, a touch of refinement that underlines the decorative intention without tipping into excess. It isn’t a utilitarian piece of furniture: it is an object designed to accompany a bourgeois drawing room, to move gracefully among sofas and screens, to display glassware or serve liqueurs with a theatrical touch.
The wheels, discreet but well integrated, complete that idea of elegant mobility. They are not mere accessories: they are part of the furniture’s language, of its vocation as a living piece, adaptable, always ready to come on stage.
Tracked shipping and careful packing.
Seller's Story
It is a serving cabinet that breathes that early Modernist spirit, still keeping the artisanal elegance of the 19th century, but already pointing toward the lightness and the sensuality of curvilinear forms. The structure, in dark, warm wood, rises with a wavelike rhythm: the sides seem to sketch a small arabesque, as if the piece wanted to move on its own.
Each shelf shows a cutout edge, almost floral, that softens the geometry and gives it that organic air so characteristic of Modernism.
The brass details —the upper finials, the escutcheons that embrace the uprights, the small, bright wheels— provide a luminous contrast, a touch of refinement that underlines the decorative intention without tipping into excess. It isn’t a utilitarian piece of furniture: it is an object designed to accompany a bourgeois drawing room, to move gracefully among sofas and screens, to display glassware or serve liqueurs with a theatrical touch.
The wheels, discreet but well integrated, complete that idea of elegant mobility. They are not mere accessories: they are part of the furniture’s language, of its vocation as a living piece, adaptable, always ready to come on stage.
Tracked shipping and careful packing.
