Buffets and Cabinets's profile

Maurizio Galante Cabinet Design

Today we bring you yet another outstanding unique cabinet: the an amazing Cabinet Design by Maurizio Galante. What is peculiar in this piece is the fact that it doesn’t have doors to hide the inside, but curtains. We can state that the creative boundaries have been broken! Available in pink and gold, be mesmerized by this extravagant cabinet.
In 2003 designer Maurizio Galante teamed up with trend forecast analyst and designer Tal Lancman, to form INTERWARE. Their crossover vision transverses the different design disciplines, from fashion to furniture, interiors, lights, food, architecture and gardening.
As the duo moves freely between disciplines, they revisit domains equipped with new understandings, insights and observations. The process results in a multi-faceted concept, with a subtle balance between the pragmatic and the irrational.
The team follows all steps of design and production, from trend research, to all aspects of marketing, including definition of brand image, strategy, communication, packaging, and presentation.
Galante and Lancman have curated several design exhibitions, and in 2003 have been assigned design curators for the Museum of Modern Art Grand–Duc Jean in Luxembourg, conceptualizing and collaborating on content selection for the museum’s store and restaurant, researching and collaborating with artists, designers, and artisans, and developing installations for special events.
They've presented their work and installations at MUDAM  Fondation Cartier Pour L’art Contemporain in Paris, Museum of Modern Art in New-York, and Palazzo Pitti in Florence.
A retrospective exhibition “MAURIZIO GALANTE & TAL LANCMAN”, Transversal Design” was presented at Saint Etienne’s museum of art and industry, Triennale Design museum in Milan, Sao Paulo Design Week, Beijing Design Week, and Museum of Modern Art Grand-Duc Jean.
Both versions of this cabinet are stricking!
“… Is it possible to stretch a line between the standard, the popular,  the duplicated and the unique? Can the basic live with the elaborate, the common with the rare? The everyday is not necessarily about repetition and routine: it can be magical!” – Maurizio Galante

What do you think of this piece? We're fascinated by it!
If you want to see more, visit us at www.buffetsandcabinets.com 
Maurizio Galante Cabinet Design
Published:

Maurizio Galante Cabinet Design

Published:

Creative Fields