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Hide Me
Architonic ID: 20739024
Year of Launch: 2023
We could already find booths in China in the IVth century BC. They allowed people of that era to create homogeneous spaces dedicated to different customs. One ceremonial, one private.
When we divide up our interior spaces, we make a conscious effort to create something dynamic in the room, in the way we live and in the way we respond to the challenges that our interior spaces face. In essence, a physical separation, like Hide Me, also represents a way we decide to live our lives. We decide to move from one area to another to be able to better manage each thing separately. This is what Gino Carollo has managed to do. With Hide Me, he has created two different types of separation, one from the floor and the other from the ceiling. Several materials are combined in each panel: zebrano or eucalyptus wood, mirrors, varnished wood or metal inserts. With this sharp contrast, this sharp separation so detailed, but at the same time so measured, it reflects our inner needs and recognitions.
Concept
In essence, a physical separation, like Hide Me, also represents a way in which we decide to live our lives. We decide to move from one area to another, to experience an environment in all its nuances, Hide Me best expresses this concept, exploiting to the full the potential that any environment offers, with its combination of materials between metal, wood and glass/mirror results in a different, eclectic and modern partition.
This product belongs to collection:
Engineered wood, Glass, Metal, Mirror glass, Structure engineered wood, Structure glass, Structure metal, Wood
Explore the Arketipo catalog collection.

Italy
Born in Vicenza, he began his career in the field of Industrial Design in 1990, also working as an art director with prestigious Italian and international companies in the furniture sector. He was commissioned by Assarredo to design the setup and coordinated image for the Italy Pavilion at the International Furniture Fair in Cologne in 1992 and 1993, and also in 1992, the Italian Pavilion at the Interieur fair in Vienna. In 1993, he took part in the Dirattan exhibition in Milan and in 1994 in the "Progetti e Territori" exhibition at the Abitare il Tempo fair in Verona. Some of his products have been exhibited at the MoMA in New York. During the same years, he received the Du Pont award in Cologne, the Young Design award in Milan, and the Casaidea award in Rome. In 2012, he won the Interior Innovation Award in Cologne for the "Bookless" product by Interlübke. In 1999, he founded Studio28 Gino Carollo with the goal of creating a qualified team to support companies in the industry. Product design, combined with engineering and the creation of models and prototypes, proved to be key tools that enabled the studio to achieve concrete results over the years and to establish long-term collaborations. In recent years, Studio28’s industrial design activity has expanded with the addition of new areas of expertise, particularly in the field of architectural design for exhibition spaces, showrooms, and corporate identity.