Skip to content Skip to footer

The Cave Crystal Table

A sculptural table base formed from mirrored stainless-steel “crystals,” rising upward like fractured geological structures beneath a floating glass top.

Artist Statement

The Cave Crystal Table draws inspiration from mineral formations—sharp, angular structures that appear to grow from the ground. Each stainless-steel element is folded and pressed into faceted, irregular planes, then polished to a mirror finish. The result is a cluster of reflective “crystal” pillars supporting the transparent weight of a glass top.

The interplay between the angular geometry and the liquid-like reflections creates a shifting optical field: from some angles the forms appear hard and architectural, while from others they behave like flowing metal. Light fractures across the surfaces, echoing the crystalline theme that defines the piece.

The table balances sculpture and function. Its structure feels excavated from a cavern, yet its mirrored surfaces bring contemporary refinement, turning a natural form into a design object that transforms with every change of light.

1/1 Installation

Use a tempered glass top within the recommended dimensions (1400 × 2800 × 19 mm). Place the base on a level surface and ensure even contact between the glass and the metal pillars. Ideal lighting is soft, diffused and slightly angled to enhance the faceted reflections without glare. Suitable for dining rooms, boardrooms, galleries or interiors where the reflective “crystals” can interact with surrounding architecture.

1/2 Relational Works

These pieces align naturally with the theme and visual language:

Monolith — large-format reflective slab with crystalline distortions

The Wedge — angular sculptural profile with metallic relief

Pedestal II — faceted vertical structure

River Wild — reflective surfaces with geological undertones