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Architonic ID: 20111378
Year of Launch: 2019
An inspiration coming from the agricultural landscape, that guided the architects Irene Goldberg & Pitsou Kedem to develop Mirror Lines, the new MDF Italia collection of six mirrors.
More precisely, the irrigated fields and the rice paddies seen from above led the architects to resume the geometric patterns of that world, projecting them into a creative line of mirrors.
The glance is exciting: in the metal frame next to the light reflected by the mirrors, decorative inserts in different materials stand out. A furnishing solution that irradiates vitality and energy, for an unusual, but original and highly involving overall view.
“The opportunity to work with onyx, steel and other materials allowed us to add nature in our design” the designers explained. “Marble and brass, so substantial and with changing colours, seemed to be the simplest way to pay tribute to the fruits of the earth, taming these materials to the rituals of everyday life”.
Mirror Lines is a suggestive and versatile collection, to enliven the home walls with new geometries and surprising effects, fit for both classic and contemporary spaces.
Structure and types
Steel structure, 5 mm thick, powder coated in matt black nickel colour or in matt pearl nickel colour.
There are six formal types (4 horizontal and 2 vertical) which, according to their scheme or layout, can create big configurations of great impact.
• Composition 1, L210 D5 H25 cm
• Composition 2, L164 D5 H45 cm
• Composition 3, L155 D5 H30 cm
• Composition 4, L155 D5 H45 cm
• Composition 5, L12 D5 H145 cm
• Composition 6, L32 D5 H140 cm
Wall fixing through built- in brackets with multiple drilling.
Each composition, including a 4 mm thick mirror with bevelled edging, is completed with decorative elements, specifically:
• brass: black medium density fibres panel, veneered with a matt brushed brass sheet with transparent acrylic coating;
• marble/stone: marble element available in white Carrara marble, Guatemala marble, or green onyx.
Concept
An inspiration coming from the agricultural landscape, that guided the architects Irene Goldberg & Pitsou Kedem to develop Mirror Lines, the new MDF Italia collection of six mirrors.
More precisely, the irrigated fields and the rice paddies seen from above led the architects to resume the geometric patterns of that world, projecting them into a creative line of mirrors.
The glance is exciting: in the metal frame next to the light reflected by the mirrors, decorative inserts in different materials stand out. A furnishing solution that irradiates vitality and energy, for an unusual, but original and highly involving overall view.
“The opportunity to work with onyx, steel and other materials allowed us to add nature in our design” the designers explained. “Marble and brass, so substantial and with changing colours, seemed to be the simplest way to pay tribute to the fruits of the earth, taming these materials to the rituals of everyday life”.
Mirror Lines is a suggestive and customisable collection, to enliven the home walls with new geometries and surprising effects, fit for both classic and contemporary spaces.
This product belongs to collection:

Explore the MDF Italia catalog collection.

Israel
Pitsou Kedem Architects Studio opened in 2000 and today consists of 11 architects. The studio is responsible for the design and planning of many projects in Israel and lately, also in Europe. Pitsou Kedem set up the studio after finishing his studies at the Architectural Association School of Architecture (AA). The studio’s design language and concept is founded on the modernist style and his work encompasses the values and principles of the period as well as the design philosophies of the modernist movement. During its formative years, the studio was involved in a constant dialogue with the fundamental principles of minimalism: reduction and moderation, clean lines for each element, separation of structural materials as part of the process designed to avoid the irrelevant in order to emphasize the significant and refining and seeking out the essence of the space. Together, all these elements lead to a strong architectural concept that is uncompromising in its search for the absolute truth, in its pursuit for purity of form and shape and in its goal of achieving a spatial perception of comfort and tranquility. This constant quest for simplicity leads to sophisticated and precise elements which , in turn, contributes to their uniqueness. The majority of the studio’s projects can be characterized by simple geometric, rectangular and recurring shapes that impart an exact and interconnecting look to the structure and its spaces. Structural facades are uniform, mono-chromatic, devoid of all decoration and provide a feeling of being almost monumental in nature. By using this architectural and design language, we attempt to bring order to urban chaos. For the past years, the studio has been searching for new materials, for a fresher approach that will allow us to enter new territory and step outside of recognized and boundaries. After years of simplifying materials to the extent avoiding all distractions that created those pure moments when “emptiness” disappeared and the individual sees and feels all that they failed to see and feel before, we began to add layers of materials and spatial layers. Inevitably, these layers created increasingly ambiguous and illusory spaces within the structure, layers that, in turn, created a greater sense of curiosity. A great deal of effort was used in our research for new materials, and in particular, for materials to be used for building external structures and walls. In its ongoing search to deepen and expand its architectural and design language and to add new contentment, the studio has, over the past few years, been working with contrasting materials such as weathered steel and exposed concrete on the one hand and carbon and other new and innovative materials taken from the world of industrial technology on the other. The combination of different materials and different architectural and design languages and even, on occasion, different schools of design, created, in many projects, a surprising and dramatic tension. The studio designs projects covering a wide range of sizes and complexity. From the interior design of restaurants, stores and living spaces to the design of private residences – usually those spreading over very large plots – and recently, hotels and residential complexes. In all of our projects we consult closely with the client and “brainstorm” in our efforts to discover the story, the concept, that flash of inspiration that will lead to the project’s design. The nucleus of an idea, leads to the development of the design language and concept which then leads to the development of spaces which serve the users – whilst all the time, placing an emphasis on the context and the integration of the building into the urban fabric. The studio has, over the years, been awarded many prizes including, for the past seven years, the Israeli Design Award. Our designs have been showcased in many professional journals and magazines around the world as well as on leading architectural web sites. Pitsou Kedem has mentored graduation projects for the Faculty of Architecture at the Technion, Israel and lectures regularly at all of Israel’s architectural faculties.