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    We visited Maria Bruun in her studio in Østerbro, Copenhagen, a bright, open space where large windows draw in daylight and illuminate prototypes, material samples, and working sketches. At the center stands Re-Norm in oak. Its sides are slightly uneven, and as you move around it, the geometry shifts. From above, the form resolves into a sail-like silhouette. 

    Sitting along the table’s softly curved edge, something feels slightly different. The angle changes how we face each other, influencing posture, eye contact, and the flow of conversation, gently shaping the interaction without directing it.

    Trained at the Royal Danish Academy in Copenhagen, Maria Bruun established her studio in 2012. From the outset, her work moved between gallery pieces and industrial production — less as a strategy, more as a reflection of her curiosity. That duality still defines her practice today.

    Experimental works offer space to explore ideas, while collaborations bring them into everyday life. “I need both,” she says. “The conceptual freedom, and the reality of creating something people actually use.” Re-Norm grew from that balance. Bruun looked at contemporary rituals — how we sit, gather, and share space today, as a point of departure for the table’s design.

    Maria Bruun “I wanted to question what we define as normal,” she explains. “The way we gather and position ourselves is far more fluid than we tend to assume.”

    Bruun’s first sketches of Re-Norm were poetic and deliberately exaggerated. The tabletop narrowed dramatically toward one end, as if dissolving in perspective, until it could hold little more than a single vase. “It was very conceptual at first,” she recalls.

    Through close dialogue with Muuto’s team, that expressive gesture was gradually translated into a functional design. The sharp taper softened into a gentle curve. The sculptural legs were adjusted and refined. Chair spacing and legroom were carefully studied.

     

    What began as a formal exploration evolved into a table made for everyday use, while still challenging established formats. Instead of reinforcing convention, Re-Norm proposes a more unstructured and inclusive geometry for gathering. For Bruun, this adjustment reflects the way we gather today.

    Maria Bruun “We don’t sit strictly opposite each other anymore,” she explains. “Our way of gathering is more diagonal, more fluid, both at home and at work.”

    The rituals around the table have evolved, as dining overlaps with work, studying, and social gatherings, and its form follows that shift. The name suggests a reconsideration of the norms that have long shaped how we sit together. Where traditional tables are built on symmetry and hierarchy, with defined head positions, evenly spaced seating, and an implied order, Bruun offers something more fluid.

     

    The asymmetrical geometry, with sides of different lengths and no fixed orientation, gently dissolves those structures. There is no single “right” seat and no prescribed arrangement, only the freedom to sit closer or farther apart, to cluster informally.

     

    Materiality shaped the project from the beginning. Bruun chose veneer over solid wood, working with pressed veneer construction as both structure and expression. Beneath the tabletop, curved arches support the surface, a detail she refers to as “the smile.”

    Maria Bruun “The smile rationalizes the veneer,” she explains. “It makes the construction visible. We don’t hide the layers, we acknowledge them.”

    Color became another dimension of the table’s character. Alongside oak and walnut, a blue version highlights the shifting geometry and brings forward its sense of movement. “The blue really captures the dynamic shape,” she says. 

    Growing up in Denmark, Bruun was immersed in a culture of considered design, from architecture to everyday objects. Within a tradition that has long linked form to changing ways of living, she positions Re-Norm as a continuation, observing contemporary behavior and translating it into shape. 

    Maria Bruun “The fixed way of living can feel less relevant today,” Bruun says. “This table responds to how we live now.”

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