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Marina BaiselAtelier MartisThibeau ScarcériauxSfossilsAlena MukhinaSofia KarnukaevaLumi UniNitush-ArooshIra BoykoMomoka GomiZlata KornilovaDROZHDINIAdriana MeuniéAlexandra VolskayaSee allArtists
Marina BaiselAtelier MartisThibeau ScarcériauxSfossilsAlena MukhinaSofia KarnukaevaLumi UniNitush-ArooshIra BoykoMomoka GomiZlata KornilovaDROZHDINIAdriana MeuniéAlexandra VolskayaSee allPrivacy overview
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Monolith Bench
Nitush-ArooshThe Monolith bench explores stainless steel as a living material — one that can be expanded, stretched, and shaped beyond its industrial origins.
Formed through hydroforming, it captures the quiet tension between control and release, where pressure reveals subtle undulations across its surface.
The work takes its name from the idea of the monolith — a form that appears solid and permanent, yet here becomes fluid, reflective, and responsive. Each encounter shifts its perception, as light and surroundings fragment across the surface.
At once still and alive, the Monolith Bench stands as a study in transformation — an industrial material reimagined as something elemental and ever-changing.
Details
Materials
Polished stainless steel
Dimensions
204 × 52 × H 55 cm
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Monolith Bench
Have questions? Contact us
The Monolith bench explores stainless steel as a living material — one that can be expanded, stretched, and shaped beyond its industrial origins.
Formed through hydroforming, it captures the quiet tension between control and release, where pressure reveals subtle undulations across its surface.
The work takes its name from the idea of the monolith — a form that appears solid and permanent, yet here becomes fluid, reflective, and responsive. Each encounter shifts its perception, as light and surroundings fragment across the surface.
At once still and alive, the Monolith Bench stands as a study in transformation — an industrial material reimagined as something elemental and ever-changing.
Details
Materials
Polished stainless steel
Dimensions
204 × 52 × H 55 cm
About Artist
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India-born artists and brothers, Nitush and Aroosh, epitomize a new language of design, characterized by sculptural textures and unique artistic expressions. Their creations defy convention, incorporating stainless steel into ethereal, hollow forms that captivate the imagination and challenge traditional notions of beauty and functionality. They pride themselves on their environmentally friendly production methods, which eschew casting processes in favor of a hydroforming technique. Through hydroforming, they coax stainless steel into three dimensional shapes, allowing fluid pressure to mold the metal into dynamic and organic forms. However, it’s the meticulous handwork that truly elevates their creations. Following the hydroforming process, Nitush and Aroosh shape the surface of each piece.
Nitush and Aroosh sculpt metal into poetry. Through a synthesis of cutting-edge hydroforming and meticulous handcraft, they transform stainless steel into fluid, lightweight forms that evoke the natural world — logs, ripples, moonlight — without ever imitating it. Their objects blur the line between function and sculpture, inviting touch, reflection, and contemplation. Embracing a zero-casting, eco-conscious approach, the brothers coax steel into hollow shapes that shimmer with movement, light, and tension. Whether resting as a bench or glowing on a wall, their works carry the silent drama of elemental forces — water, gravity, time — held within polished surfaces that both mirror and dissolve their surroundings.