Message Sent

Your secure message was sent successfully

OK

VILLA REQUEST FORM

Please fill in this form and our team will contact and assist you within the day!

* required field

or

MY DATES ARE FLEXIBLE

How did you hear about us?

Alternatively, please call our Reservation Team directly at +30 1234567891 or email us at [email protected]

YACHT CHARTER REQUEST FORM

Please fill in this form and our team will contact and assist you within the day!

* required field

or

MY DATES ARE FLEXIBLE

How did you hear about us?

Alternatively, please call our Reservation Team directly at +30 1234567891 or email us at [email protected]
home  >  Works  >  OA19.2

ENQUIRE ABOUT

OA19.2 BY Omer Arbel

Make an enquiry about your selection by filling this form and we will get back to you as soon as possible.


OA19.2

LIMITED
Description

19.2 Overspill Brass Vessel results from re-interpretingbthe technique of sandcasting brass. Instead of eliminating the overspill (or waste) associated with the process, this excess is encouraged and celebrated. A round form is pressed into the sand with a sand plug suspended above. The resulting void between the layers is filled with molten brass – encouraging a generous and unpredictable overspill along the open perimeter.
RED BRASS

Dimensions

VARIOUS DIMENSIONS

Materials Brass
ENQUIRE SHARE BY EMAIL

DESIGNER BIO

Omer Arbel

BIOGRAPHY AWARDS INFORMATION

Omer Arbel was born in Jerusalem, Israel in 1976, grew up in Vancouver. He was trained in the 1990s as an architect and he apprenticed with architects Enric Miralles in Barcelona and John and Patricia Patkau in Vancouver. His architectural background is evident in his furniture and lighting design - his pieces are characterized not only by their own inherent qualities but also by the way they affect the spaces around them. Arbel's work has received some of the highest honors of contemporary industrial design and has been published extensively. 113 is the result of a strand of new discoveries that are part of OAO’s ongoing research into the reciprocal relationship between glass and metals.

Related Works