Mise En Scène - The Bar
by Tatjana von Stein
In stock
Material
Green Lacquer
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The Bar is a tall lacquered cabinet by Tatjana von Stein, from the Mise en Scène collection.
Its proportions are deliberately architectural: narrow and upright, a form that reads more like a standing object than a conventional storage piece. Two doors open on a dark olive-green lacquered body, the colour carrying a depth that shifts with the light. Four slender metal legs lift the cabinet from the floor, silver-toned with gold-tipped feet, giving the piece a quality of deliberate lightness despite its vertical mass.
A stone slab crowns the top, dark and subtly veined, adding mineral weight at the summit. The cabinet edges are finished with thin gold-tone metallic accents that frame the silhouette precisely without overwhelming it. Produced with the French artisan group Aurige, The Bar is made-to-order, numbered, signed, and accompanied by a certificate of authenticity.
Part of the Mise en Scène collection (2023), The Bar translates Tatjana von Stein's theatrical design language into a functional piece for the domestic interior.
W 96 x D 53.5 x H 179 cm
W 37.8 x D 21.06 x H 70.47 in
Materials: Lacquer, Walnut Burlwood, Metal, Mirror and Leather
About
Tatjana von Stein
Tatjana von Stein works from London as a collectible furniture designer, bringing a French-German perspective to a practice that moves between interior architecture and sculptural form.
Her approach centers on the psychology of space: the premise that furniture shapes how people feel in a room as much as it furnishes it. Von Stein established her reputation as co-founder of Sella Concept in 2016, an interior architecture practice that sharpened her understanding of how objects and enclosure interact. In 2023 she founded her eponymous studio, turning that accumulated thinking toward made-to-order collectible furniture, pieces numbered and signed, each delivered with a certificate of authenticity.
The Mise en Scène collection, eight inaugural pieces, takes dance as its organizing principle, specifically the choreographic exchange between Martha Graham and Isamu Noguchi, where bodies and objects share the same stage. Each piece holds architectural precision in tension with expressive form: burl wood for its organic patterning, lacquer surfaces that catch and redirect light, silk and metal details that add tactile contrast. All work is produced with Aurige, a Paris atelier of heritage craftspeople. Her ambition is for these pieces to become future classics, objects conceived to outlast their moment.
On Monde Singulier, von Stein's furniture reaches collectors looking for bespoke work at this level. Surface Magazine named her Designer of the Day in 2023.




































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