A Table That Doesn’t Sit Still

A Table That Doesn’t Sit Still

The Bobster Blue Coffee Table by denHolm is no ordinary sculptural coffee table. With scalloped edges and blocky, animal-like limbs, it crouches instead of sits—part creature, part concept. Crafted from South Australian limestone and dyed an electric indigo, Bobster feels both ancient and otherworldly.

Its surface is chalky and cosmic, punctuated by flecks, fossils, and raw imperfections. A table, yes—but also a sculpture with shadows that dance like curtains in a breeze. In hospitality lounges, gallery lobbies, or other bold commercial spaces, it commands attention without demanding it.

That kind of confidence calls to mind Lee Broom’s Tribeca Tables—another standout piece that pushes form over function. But where Broom’s work is luminous and vertical, Bobster is grounded and matte, an elemental sculptural coffee table with quiet strength.

This is what happens when material meets mischief. When carved stone learns to smirk.

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