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Wood

  • This chair in chestnut wood revives the forms and decoration of an ancient model of the Sardinian tradition, decorated in linear composition with the typical symbols of the hand-carved rosette and lapwing. Handcrafted, this striking chair is suitable for various rooms of the house.

  • This small original bottle and glass holder that can be hung on walls has an uneven white finish. It is part of the new line of home décor accessories and is available in different shapes, finishes and colour effects.

  • This original and elegant coffee table with masterly mosaic work combining the fine colour effects of different varieties of wood features sophisticated geometric shapes enriched by an insert in loom woven fabric, a distinctive feature of the new B&B line of this artisanal carpenter’s shop.

  • The small and precious chest reinterprets traditional Sardinian intaglio chests with a new touch. Being made and decorated by hand using solid chestnut, it is painted with a particular and personal procedure that highlights the fine grain of the wood carvings and decorations.

  • This distinctive traditional wedding chest made of chestnut wood with solid lines and finely carved decorations, is designed as an elegant container in refined natural colours.

Il settore

The woodcraft sector in Sardinia, with a its ancient and codified traditions, is expressed in contemporary productions with new and diversified interpretations. Featuring recognizable linguistic traits in its decorations or with new technical and stylistic solutions, the local master craftsmen continue to express the identity of the island through motifs and suggestions.
The traditional carving decoration is created in a masterly manner by means of a burin on the most precious artefacts, such as sa cascia, the hope chest, or with a curt touch in several objects of daily use in agricultural and pastoral contexts. In both cases the marks engraved serve as a language, a written story to be read again and again, the expression of a people with a strong identity. 
Distinctive carnival masks made as part of local tradition. Being included in the carving section, they are crafted in the towns of Ottana and Mamoiada, and more recently in Oristano, worn during the traditional local carnivals, in dynamic and engaging performances.
 
The new interpretations range between free and recent experiences of local history, which resort to woodcraft to create decorative objects, intended as small sculptures. Artist and designer Eugenio Tavolara was the first who, during the first half of last century, designed a series of small dressed sculptures, the puppets, which portrayed characters and scenes of the traditional life in Sardinia.