Decor

Spolia Butte Price on request

Edoardo Cozzani — Available through The Orb

Spolia is a sculptural composition built from fragments — raw stone interrupted by a continuous, polished glass form that binds the piece together. The work evokes the architectural practice from which it takes its name: the reuse of materials from older structures, carrying memory forward into something new.

The dark, hand-worked glass coils around the stone like a protective band or a trace of movement frozen in time. Its reflective surface contrasts with the rough mineral texture, creating a dialogue between permanence and transformation, weight and fluidity.

Neither fully object nor monument, Spolia feels like an artifact displaced from another context — intimate in scale yet loaded with presence. It invites slow looking and close proximity.

Available by commission

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This piece is commissioned and delivered through The Orb. Customization, sourcing, and logistics are managed directly by our team in collaboration with the designer.

Spolia Butte Price on request
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  • Curator's Note

    Each piece is handmade and unique. Variations in stone, glass, and proportion are integral to the work.
  • Materials

    Smoked Grey Blown Glass, Black Belgian Marble
  • Customizations

    One of a kind piece

Edoardo Cozzani, Edoardo Cozzani’s work explores the fragile dialogue between nature and the man-made — transforming raw materials into poetic, timeworn forms that echo memory, erosion, and renewal.

Italian-born and New York-based, Edoardo Cozzani (b. 1993, Rome) navigates the liminal spaces between nature and the artificial, matter and context. His multidisciplinary practice—the result of lived journeys through deserts, swamps and mountains—uses experimental photography, analog sculptural techniques and site-specific interventions to probe how materials evolve, accumulate history and bear witness to human intervention. Cozzani’s recent work transforms marble, glass, aluminum and unexpected found matter into “modern fossils” that invite reflection on time, landscape and our imprint on both.