Sizar Alexis Collection - ItooRaba Side Table & Stool
by Sizar Alexis
In stock
Material
Stained Black Pine
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The ItooRaba Side Table and Stool is a dual-purpose piece from the Sizar Alexis Collection, built in dark-stained pine. Its flat top carries a central rectangular cutout and four raised, ribbed rectangular elements across the surface. The base combines four corner legs with a central block support. Proportions are compact and geometric, consistent with the block aesthetic that defines the ItooRaba series.
Sizar Alexis designed the ItooRaba line around the monolithic qualities of Brutalist architecture. This side table and stool format applies those formal ideas at a smaller scale, where every surface element is both structural and visual. The piece works as a side table, a stool, or an object stand. Its dark finish uses the same pine-staining process as the ItooRaba Dining Chair and ItooRaba Lounge Chair.
Available on Monde Singulier within the Sizar Alexis Collection.
W 40 x D 40 x H 37 cm
W 15.75 x D 15.75 x H 14.57 in
Materials: Burned and stained black solid pine
About
Sizar Alexis
Sizar Alexis is a Swedish-Iraqi designer based in Eskilstuna, working at the intersection of Scandinavian brutalist design and ancient Mesopotamian heritage.
Before founding his studio in 2019, Alexis spent six years as a design engineer at Volvo, then studied fine arts at Beckmans College of Design. That formation, between industrial engineering and fine arts, shapes his practice throughout. He works with blackened steel, pine wood, and leather, materials both abundant in the Swedish landscape and tied to Eskilstuna's historic steel industry. Components for his pieces are produced in his father's metal tool factory, then hand-assembled in his own studio.
His work holds two forces in tension: the geometric weight of brutalist forms and the cultural memory of ancient Mesopotamia. "I want to convey a sense of chaos and harmony at the same time," he has said. As a descendant of the Chaldean diaspora with roots tracing to northern Iraq, Alexis channels that history into functional sculpture. Collections such as Lahmu and Ousia translate Mesopotamian symbolism into geometric furniture, pieces that read simultaneously as domestic objects and as cultural arguments. The Discovered exhibition at the Design Museum in London in 2021 brought his work to international attention; the Common/un/common duo show at Atelier Ecru Gallery in Ghent in 2022 confirmed its standing. He is an AD 100 designer.
On Monde Singulier, his pieces offer collectible design furniture that carries historical depth rarely found in Scandinavian production.
































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