Drip Bench
The bench explores the idea of a solid mass softened by time
Drip Bench is conceived as a sculptural piece that sits at the intersection of furniture, architecture, and object. Rather than being designed as a conventional bench, the project explores the idea of a solid mass softened by time—an object that appears to have been shaped by gravity, erosion, and flow.
The geometry is continuous and fluid, as if the material had slowly dripped and settled into its final form. Legs and seat merge into a single body, eliminating hierarchy between structural support and surface. This monolithic quality gives the bench a strong physical presence, while its softened edges and seamless transitions invite touch and occupation.
Placed within an interior setting, Drip Bench operates as a spatial anchor. It stabilizes the room visually while remaining calm and understated, allowing light, shadow, and reflection to animate its surface throughout the day. The object reads differently from every angle—sometimes heavy and grounded, sometimes almost liquid—challenging the perception of weight and solidity.
More than a piece of furniture, Drip Bench functions as an inhabitable sculpture. It proposes a slower, more contemplative relationship with everyday objects, where sitting becomes an act of engaging with form, material, and space.