Brazilian Modern Filing Cabinet / Side Table on Casters in Rosewood, Jorge Zalszupin, 1960s — Lot 91AC
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Description
A refined study in mobility, material richness, and architectural restraint, this two-drawer filing cabinet by Jorge Zalszupin exemplifies the designer’s uniquely intellectual contribution to Brazilian modernism. Conceived during a period when workplace furniture in Brazil was evolving alongside the country’s rapid modernization, the piece reflects Zalszupin’s ability to transform functional storage into an object of enduring sculptural presence.
Executed in richly figured Brazilian rosewood (jacarandá), the cabinet is composed in Zalszupin’s distinctive patchwork configuration — an approach that elevates material economy into visual composition. Carefully assembled sections of rosewood, each with its own grain movement and tonal variation, create a deeply animated surface that shifts subtly with light. Rather than masking these variations, the composition celebrates them, emphasizing the natural intelligence and expressive depth of old-growth jacarandá. The professionally restored satin-matte finish preserves the tactile authenticity of the wood while revealing exceptional grain clarity and tonal warmth.
Structurally, the cabinet is disciplined and compact: a clean cubic volume framed by solid cylindrical legs and fitted with discreet casters, introducing a sense of lightness and mobility uncommon within case furniture of the period. The wheels allow the piece to transition effortlessly between functions and environments — equally compelling as a traditional filing cabinet, mobile office storage, or sculptural side table within a living room or bedroom setting. Positioned beside a sofa, lounge chair, or desk, the cabinet reads less as purely utilitarian furniture and more as a refined architectural object integrated into contemporary living.
Exposed metal fasteners along the side panels reinforce the cabinet’s structural honesty, while leather-wrapped pulls provide a restrained material contrast against the density of the rosewood. These subtle details reflect Zalszupin’s characteristic balance between industrial pragmatism and artisanal refinement — never decorative for its own sake, but always intentional.
The drawers retain smooth functionality, and the proportions remain remarkably versatile: compact enough for urban interiors while substantial enough to anchor a vignette visually. In contemporary spaces, the piece transitions naturally from executive office furniture to sophisticated residential use, functioning equally well as a bedside table, movable side cabinet, or accent storage piece within a curated interior.
Professionally refinished and presenting in excellent vintage condition, this example stands as a concise expression of Jorge Zalszupin’s enduring design language — where structural clarity, honest construction, and luxurious materiality converge with uncommon restraint.















