543 Broadway, Gaetano Pesce

543 Broadway, Gaetano Pesce
Info
Product
543 Broadway
Author
Gaetano Pesce
Description
With the 543 Broadway collection, Meritalia® is once again collaborating with Gaetano Pesce's own workshop to learn and reproduce his special resin processing techniques. The Broadway chair rests on four, eight or nine legs, components of a thin, essential metal frame.
543 Broadway, the resin chairs

The chairs and table from Gaetano Pesce's 543 Broadway series are the perfect example of the great designer's tendency to create designs that can be produced in series, yet are absolutely unique. Meritalia®'s diverse catalog also includes limited-edition chairs and tables, already firmly established in the collective imagination and exhibited in major museums around the world, from MoMA in New York to the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. Their uniqueness and unusual shape have made history, but there's much more.

Meritalia® is once again collaborating with Gaetano Pesce's own workshop to learn and reproduce his special resin processing techniques. The Broadway chair rests on four, eight or nine legs, components of a thin, essential metal frame. The feet are large springs: Pesce's playfulness allows the sitter to rock back and forth, left and right. The seat and backrest are focal points that reveal once again the modernity of Meritalia®'s production processes: a brilliant epoxy resin is injected into a mold, allowing the colors to mix spontaneously, creating ever-changing effects and making the result unique. Once catalyzed, this extraordinary material is assembled onto the metal frame, which remains visible thanks to the transparency of the resin itself.
543 Broadway, the resin seats

Just like in a show, everything is revealed to the eyes of those who know how to look; a “prop” that can be displayed perpetually at home or any other space. Despite having an extraordinarily artistic and almost performative component, the Broadway table and chairs assert their function of conviviality and everyday practicality—always under a radical lens.