NACHO CARBONELL
ARGENTUM COLLECTION, 2025
Multiple Reflections, Nacho Carbonell Mirror
With a concept faithful to his style, based on the recreation of a tree branch, a chiseling work was carried out on metal to create the veins and shapes on what will be the base of the mirrors, which are incorporated on the top and composed of multiple small pieces that in turn generate a game of interlaced mini-mirrors.
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NACHO CARBONELL
Born in Spain in 1980, Nacho Carbonell graduated in 2003 from Cardenal Herrera C.E.U. University in Spain before going on to study at Design Academy Eindhoven. After graduating, Carbonell immediately began to make a name for himself in the design world, with his 2009 Evolution collection earning him a nomination for the Beazley Design of the Year from the Design Museum in London. In 2010, a year after being named as a Designer of the Future at Design Miami/Basel, he presented this Identity, which redefined his style of organic forms and rough and colourful textures.
Carbonell is known for his tactile approach to sculpture, playing with texture, experimentaltechniques, and natural materials. His approach is unique, seeing objects as ‘living organisms’ that come alive and surprise you with their behaviour. For Carbonell forming a relationship with his work is integral – he creates objects with his hands in order to impart something of his personality to them. He describes his pieces as “communicative objects that arouse one’s feelings and imagination... that allows you to escape everyday life.”
Carbonell’s designs are made using locally sourced materials he finds near his studio in Eindhoven. For his sculptural Cocoon lamps, the artist creates tree-like sculptures held together by steel branches and adorned with mesh-like cocoons. The cocoons are made using a steel mesh covered with a plaster of Carbonell’s own creation, a mix of sand and textile hardener. The sculptures seem otherworldly in their composition, and are reminiscent of magic realism, seeming to both imitate and transcend the natural world.
Carbonell’s lamps were among those exhibited at the opening of Carpenters Workshop Gallery’s San Francisco location. Their tree-like forms filled the upper aisles of the renovated St Joseph’s Church, adding a surrealist ethereality to the space.
His pieces are shown in museums around the world such as the Groningen Museum in the Netherlands, the 2121 Museum in Japan, Fnac-Fonds national d’art contemporai in France, in the MoMA San Francisco, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Mint Museum in the United States. His pieces are also found in several private collections.