Dining Table is born from the encounter between Ron Gilad’s conceptual irony and the artisanal savoir-faire of the company that produces it, in a collaboration that transforms the everyday object into a poetic reflection on form. The Israeli designer, always adept at navigating the boundary between art and design, translates his research into visual perception and material lightness into this project, drawing inspiration from the great masters of surrealism and metaphysics—from De Chirico to Magritte, passing through Duchamp.
The result is a table that seems to deny its own gravity: an extra-light glass top suspended on a lacquered iron base that draws a continuous line in space, like a three-dimensional pencil mark. It’s a simple yet meaningful gesture, expressing Gilad’s desire to reduce material to its essentials without sacrificing expressive power.
The base, available in various shades, is an abstract transposition of an intimate landscape: the facades of the buildings in Tribeca, the New York neighborhood where the designer lived for over a decade. Through this collaboration, personal memory becomes design and function becomes storytelling. Dining Table is thus the meeting point between industrial rigor and the poetry of a design that, despite its apparent fragility, manages to sustain everything.








