“Egg” Coffee Table in Caviuna Wood & Glass by Giuseppe Scapinelli, Brazil, 1950s — Lot 834A
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Designed in Brazil during the 1950s by Giuseppe Scapinelli, this sculptural Egg coffee table exemplifies the expressive maturity of Brazilian modern design in the postwar period. An Italian-born designer who established his practice in São Paulo, Scapinelli developed a distinctive language defined by fluid geometry, refined craftsmanship, and an architectural understanding of furniture as sculptural form.
Executed in richly grained Brazilian Caviuna wood, the table features an organically contoured frame supported by elegantly curved legs that create a sense of movement and visual lightness. The softly rounded, egg-shaped silhouette reflects Scapinelli’s departure from strict functionalism toward a more sensual modernism, characteristic of Brazilian design in the 1950s. The glass top—subtly etched—introduces transparency and contrast, allowing the sculptural wooden structure to remain fully visible.
Scapinelli’s work occupies a unique position within Brazilian modernism, bridging European training with Brazil’s tradition of noble hardwoods and artisanal production. Rare and highly expressive, this table stands as both a functional centerpiece and a sculptural statement—an object conceived to animate the interior through form, material, and balance.















