A Large Mid Century Paul Evans Cityscape Brass Patchwork dining Table.
Having a large 3/4" thick glass top measuring 84" long x 42" wide.
The city scape base itself measures 29" high x 44" wide x 24" Deep
Underneath the table are wheels used to easily position the table.
Paul R. Evans II, known as Paul Evans, was an American-born furniture designer, sculptor, and artist, who is famous for his contributions to American furniture design and the American Craft movement of the 1970s, and with his work with the influential American manufacturer Directional Furniture.
Evans’s primary material was metal, not wood, which was favored by his fellow studio designers, and Bucks County, Pennsylvania, neighbors George Nakashima and Philip Lloyd Powell. He trained in metallurgy and studied at the Cranbrook Academy of Art, the famed crucible of modern design and art in suburban Detroit. For a time early in his career, Evans also worked at Sturbridge Village, a historical “living museum” in Massachusetts, where he gave demonstrations as a costumed silversmith.