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Agape FACE À FACE 浴缸

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Face à face by Jean Nouvel Design is the new concept of architectural bathtubs and washbasins marks the launch of the collaboration between Agape and the French architect.‎

For Nouvel, architecture is simultaneously depth of thought and rigor, and poetry and pleasure.‎ Every element of his concept of the bathtub is perfectly calibrated to invite us into a space of relaxation, well-being, and dialogue.‎ Showcasing the beauty of natural marble through the geometric language of two-dimensionality.‎ These values are apparent in the collection’s name.‎ In French, face means “surface” as well as “human face”.‎

Thanks to an ingenious system of invisible joints, the bathtub is constructed such that its surfaces appear to simply approach one another side by side.‎ The effect is both imposing and light, essential and material, generous and functional.‎ Surfaces brush against one another to become a backrest.‎ Extremely precise design and careful attention to the proper angle of each surface means the bathtub becomes a comfortable nest where you can sit, lie down, read, and relax.‎ A tribute to Jacques-Louis David’s iconic painting The Death of Marat.‎

“In the interiors of my architecture, the bathroom is a very important space.‎ The placement of the tub, even more so.‎ Even in the most complicated setups you should leave it free-standing, like a ship at sea.‎ A spot where the light comes in, near a window with a view of the sky, the city and the landscape,” describes Jean Nouvel.‎

A vision of the bathtub as an epicenter of well-being, that finds its concrete expression in “Face à face”.‎ An eye-catching project that needs space around it.‎ An outdoor location is easy to imagine.‎

The poetics of two-dimensionality continues in the collection’s washbasins, available in the countertop, wall-mounted and freestanding versions.‎ All channeled thanks to the suitably inclined plane of the basin, they combine vertical and horizontal surfaces for a rigorous architectural structure.‎ A towel bar or storage component may be added.‎

These abstract objects use contrast to enhance, like the bathtub, the almost baroque splendor of the marble.‎ This because choice of material is of fundamental importance to Jean Nouvel and to Agape: it must be natural and have a long story, like the finest marbles.‎ For a bathroom where matter and formal purity find new architectural syntheses.‎


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