Batlló & Calvet - Calvet Mirror
by Antoni Gaudí
Material
Gold leaf
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The Calvet Mirror is the only non-seating piece in Antoni Gaudí's Batlló and Calvet collections, reproduced by BD Barcelona.
The mirror is tall and narrow, vertical in orientation, framed in carved and gilded wood with a distressed gold finish. Scrollwork and ornamental details cover the frame in dense baroque vocabulary; the asymmetric form carries the same decorative intensity as Gaudí's architectural surfaces. The piece reads as an architectural fragment as much as a furnishing.
BD Barcelona reproduces the Calvet Mirror in carved gilded wood to Gaudí's original specifications, with the distressed gold finish applied by hand.
Within any room, the Calvet Mirror acts as a focal accent. It draws directly from Gaudí's decorative vocabulary for the Calvet family commission, where baroque ornament was filtered through Catalan Modernisme.
W 58 x D 29 x H 195 cm
W 22.83 x D 11.42 x H 76.77 in
Materials: Solid oak coated with fine golden brass sheets with a gold leaf technique.
About
Antoni Gaudí
Antoni Gaudí (1852–1926) was a Catalan architect and the defining figure of Modernisme, the movement that shaped Barcelona's built environment from the 1880s through the early twentieth century. His forms trace to two sources: Catholic faith and close observation of natural structure. Hyperbolic vaults, branching stone columns, surfaces covered in fractured ceramic mosaic: Gaudí worked by identifying what organisms and physical forces had already solved, then translated those solutions into the materials of architecture. That method produced buildings unlike anything built before or since.
The same rigor extended to furniture. Gaudí designed bespoke pieces for every major building he completed, treating chairs, benches, and kneelers as structural and visual extensions of the architecture rather than independent furnishings. The Calvet Chair, created for the Casa Calvet in Barcelona around 1902, is the most studied piece in the Antoni Gaudí furniture canon. Its organic contours, carved from solid oak, carry the same catenary geometry Gaudí used in his arches and vaults. The backrest follows vertebral curves; the legs trace branching forms documented in his notebooks on natural structure. The Casa Calvet received the Barcelona City Hall's annual prize shortly after completion. For collectors today, the Calvet Chair is the essential entry point to Gaudí's work outside architecture.
BD Barcelona holds the exclusive authorization to produce Gaudí's furniture designs, working from original drawings in solid varnished oak using traditional workshop methods. BD was the first manufacturer to revive these pieces after Gaudí's death in 1926, and its editions define the reference standard for the category. Every reproduction follows the original in structural proportion, joinery technique, and finish: no approximations.
Monde Singulier presents a curated selection of BD Barcelona editions for collectors and designers working with historic European modernism. These are Gaudí's designs in the most direct sense: made from his drawings, in the materials he specified, at the proportions he calculated. Not homage, but direct continuation.
































