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Workshop Coffee Table

 Cecilie Manz, 2018/20

Workshop Coffee Table  Cecilie Manz, 2018/20

The Workshop Coffee table is an example of refinement and simplicity. Its careful craftmanship enhances the oak wood, whose grain provides its main ornamentation. Its simplicity fits to any interior, serving as a traditional coffee table as well as side table.

Workshop Coffee Table  Cecilie Manz, 2018/20

Materials frame and legs in solid oak, tabletop in plywood with oak finish

Dimensions 86 x 86 cm or 120 x 43 cm

Height 38 cm 

Workshop Coffee Table  Cecilie Manz, 2018/20

Oak – 86 x 86 cm

Workshop Coffee Table  Cecilie Manz, 2018/20

Black – 86 x 86 cm

Workshop Coffee Table  Cecilie Manz, 2018/20

Oak – 120 x 43 cm

Workshop Coffee Table  Cecilie Manz, 2018/20

Black – 120 x 43 cm

Workshop Coffee Table  Cecilie Manz, 2018/20
Workshop Coffee Table  Cecilie Manz, 2018/20

Coffee table 86 x 86 cm

Coffee table 120 x 43 cm

Workshop Coffee Table  Cecilie Manz, 2018/20
Workshop Coffee Table  Cecilie Manz, 2018/20

Cecilie Manz

Cecilie Manz

With discreet and playful aesthetics, Cecilie Manz’s work demonstrates that functional details are able to create the aesthetic essence of an object in a subtle way. Early recognition of her contribution to Danish design began with the "Micado", table designed for Fredericia in 2004.

After graduation from The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts - The School of Design in 1997, additionally studying at the University of Art and Design in Helsinki, Cecilie Manz founded her own studio in Copenhagen in 1998. Here, she designs furniture, glass, lamps and related products, mainly for the home. In addition to her work with industrial products, her experimental prototypes and more sculptural one-offs make up an important part of her work and approach:

In addition to her work with industrial products, her experimental prototypes and more sculptural one-offs make up an important part of her work and approach:

“I view all my works as fragments of one big, ongoing story where the projects are often linked or related in terms of their idea, materials and aesthetics, across time and function. My work has always revolved around simplicity, the process of working toward a pure, aesthetic and narrative object.”

Cecilie Manz is recipient of the Thorvald Bindesbøll Medal 2011, the Bruno Mathsson Prize 2009, Kunstpreis Berlin 2008, the Finn Juhl Architectural Prize 2007, The Furniture Prize 2007, the Three-Year Working Grant from the Danish Arts Foundation and several other grants.