Geometric Minimalism is a curatorial concept that reduces design to its most fundamental forms—cubes, spheres, cylinders, and triangles. These basic shapes, universally recognized, become building blocks for works that balance playfulness with precision. The pieces recall the logic of childhood construction yet remain anchored by proportion, structure, and material.
Nassi Lamps stack cubes on marble prisms with quiet rigor, while SALAK Studio builds dining tables from spheres and planes. Clovis Atelier introduces brightly lacquered chairs that shift between discipline and whimsy, and Marco Zelli assembles lamps from two simple blocks. Dining chairs by THE RAUM OBJECTS, Ford Bostwick Studio, Lucas Cambier, and Oitoproducts reveal how the same geometry transforms through steel, wood, aluminum, and upholstery—light, warm, industrial, or inviting depending on the material. PROSA’s dining chair draws on circles in varied forms, from spheres to open wheels, and Studio Indigene sets spheres into flat supports for an inventive side table. Drusch Design fits cubes together into an angular bench that reads as architecture in miniature.
Together, these works show how returning to the fundamentals never limits design. By starting with the simplest shapes, each studio creates objects that feel both essential and unexpected, proving that in geometric minimalism, the building blocks themselves are the design.