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SP-Arte 2026: check out the main releases in authorial design

From luxury sustainability to collectible design: check out the top collections and collabs at SP-Arte 2026, including names from the CASACOR lineup such as Gustavo Neves, Suite Design, Guilherme Castello Branco and Metro Arquitetos

By Nádia Sayuri Kaku

Submitted at Apr 11, 2026, 8:00 PM

Mais de 10 min de leitura
Coleção Monumental, da BONNI.

Coleção Monumental, da BONNI. (Cacá Bratke/CASACOR)

SP-Arte 2026 takes place between April 8 and 12 at the Bienal Pavilion, in Ibirapuera Park, in São Paulo. In its 22nd edition, the fair brings together around 180 exhibitors, among national and international galleries, consolidating itself as one of the leading art and design gatherings in Latin America. In the design sector, in this edition, 64 design exhibitors are participating, with 19 making their debut, including three international. Check out some highlights from 2026.

Dance Series | Ovo

Dance Series, by Ovo. Launch at SP-Arte 2026.

Série Dança, da ,Ovo. Lançamento da SP-Arte 2026. (Divulgação/CASACOR)

The Dance series by ,Ovo features folding screens and armchairs whose main element is an irregularly shaped panel that frames the straw weave: its intersections and overlaps form designs that range from the denser areas at the center to the more open ones at the edges, subverting the orthogonal pattern of warp and weft.

55design

Alumiar Collection, designed by Santídio Pereira for 55design.

Coleção Alumiar, assinada por Santídio Pereira para a 55design. (Divulgação/CASACOR)

The Alumiar collection, developed in collaboration with Piauí-born visual artist Santídio Pereira, springs from a childhood memory of the artist: the image of a light that passes through surfaces and illuminates the world. This poetic narrative becomes material when applied to 14 pieces from the brand’s portfolio, curated by Clarissa Schneider, and also featuring embroidery by artisans from the NGO Orientavida. The launches bring techniques such as perforation and cutwork.

Artefacto

Cosmos Collection, by Patrícia Anastassiadis for Artefacto.

Coleção Cosmos, de Patrícia Anastassiadis para a Artefacto. (Divulgação/CASACOR)

Under the creative direction of Patricia Anastassiadis - from the CASACOR São Paulo -, the Cosmos collection celebrates Artefacto’s 50th anniversary and proposes an interpretation that transcends the strict functionality of furniture, moving into a broader dimension of repertoire and permanence. A concept explored in the Libra chair, created especially for the fair: in a numbered edition limited to 50 units, the new piece brings the fields of furniture design closer to art collecting.

Bonni

Monumental Collection, by BONNI.

Coleção Monumental, da BONNI. (Cacá Bratke/CASACOR)

BONNI presents the Monumental Collection, a new release by designer Erik Bonissato that investigates the relationship between furniture and architecture. Comprising a sofa, lighting fixtures, tables, and seats, the collection brings together pieces conceived to take center stage in interior experiences, exploring volume, materiality, and sculptural presence. The concept is structured on three pillars: sculptural presence, longevity, and emotional scale. The pieces were designed to provoke visual and sensory impact, combining striking proportions, noble materials, and artisanal processes that reinforce the collection’s aesthetic longevity.

Cris Bertolucci

Bodies of Light exhibition, by Cris Bertolucci.

Exposição Corpos de Luz, de Cris Bertolucci. (André Klotz/CASACOR)

The Corpos de Luz exhibition brings together three new series titled Vitória, Garoa, and Takai, dedicated to investigating light as a structuring element of space. Developed from different materials such as linen, blown crystal, bamboo, and metal, the pieces reveal a line of research that turns lighting into atmosphere, narrative, and architectural presence.

Domingos Tótora + De La Cruz

Table Sobrepor, buffet Sobrepor and bench relevos: pieces from the collab between Domingos Tótora and Gabriel De La Cruz

Mesa Sobrepor, buffet Sobrepor e banco relevos: peças da collab entre Domingos Tótora e Gabriel De La Cruz (Victor Lucena/CASACOR)

Sobrepor, the first collaboration between Domingos Tótora and Gabriel De La Cruz, brings together more than ten pieces in which material takes center stage, revealing time, irregularity, and transformation as a fundamental part of the language. Tótora’s material research starts from the reuse of discarded cardboard, earth, and water, transformed into a high-density material: sourced locally in the city of Maria da Fé, in Minas Gerais, the material establishes a direct relationship between the atelier and the territory in which it is embedded. In dialogue with Gabriel De La Cruz, drawing acts as a matrix for organizing the pieces, articulating different materialities, among them reclaimed woods.

Etel

Percival Lafer and the PLE-90 sideboard, launched by ETEL

Percival Lafer e o aparador PLE-90, lançamento da ETEL (Ruy Teixeira/CASACOR)

To celebrate his 90th birthday, designer Percival Lafer launches the PLE-90, a new sideboard created from the reuse of wood fragments from ETEL’s own production. A proposal deeply connected to Percival’s creative thinking and, at the same time, to the spirit of the present. At SP-Arte, his trajectory is celebrated with an installation signed by Arthur Casas, an architect from the CASACOR São Paulo roster.

Firmacasa

Oliveira side table, by William Oliveira for Firmacasa.

Mesa lateral Oliveira, de William Oliveira para a Firmacasa. (Pedro Ocanhas/CASACOR)

The Oliveira side table is born from the encounter between stainless steel and marble. Designed by William Oliveira, the stone base, with unique tones, colors, and veining, turns the piece into an element of sculptural presence, while the polished stainless-steel structure supports the set with visual lightness, silently and discreetly reflecting the project, on a continuous, precise, and stable surface.

Gustavo Neves

Fractals Collection, by Gustavo Neves.

Coleção Fractais, de Gustavo Neves. (Adriana Barbosa/CASACOR)

Fractals are geometric structures that repeat at different scales while always maintaining their basic form. In nature, they are everywhere: as in the vein of a leaf or the formation of a crystal. And they are also the inspiration for the first participation of the Gustavo Neves brand — from the CASACOR São Paulo roster — at SP-Arte. The logic of repetition and variation runs through the entire collection, which features a solid-wood dining table, chairs in bronze and wood, armchairs, a suspended bar entirely in bronze, pendants, and sconces.

Herança Cultural

Lunar Luminaire, by Artur Lescher and Maneco Quinderé for Herança Cultural.

Luminária Lunar, de Artur Lescher e Maneco Quinderé para a Herança Cultural. (Rafael Félix/CASACOR)

The Lunar lamp, a new piece created by Artur Lescher and Maneco Quinderé, is produced in turned solid stainless steel and carved stone. The work is part of a limited edition of 10 pieces, developed exclusively for Herança Cultural. In it, two lines of inquiry come together: the formal synthesis and attention to spatial tension that mark Lescher’s trajectory, and Quinderé’s experience with light as a perceptual construct.

Itens

Oriental Collection, by Bruno de Carvalho for a itens.

Coleção Oriental, de Bruno de Carvalho para a itens. (Divulgação/CASACOR)

Inspired by the delicacy and balance of Japanese aesthetics, the Oriental collection proposes a dialogue between rigor and lightness. A slender brass rod precisely pierces superimposed layers of raw cotton. The secret lies in the texture: using fabrics with different weave densities allows light to be filtered gradually, creating a soft gradient that mimics the passage of time. It is signed by Bruno Carvalho, with creative direction by Mariana Amaral.

Jequitibá

Constanza Pascolato and Guilherme Castelo Branco.

Constanza Pascolato e Guilherme Castelo Branco. (Divulgação/CASACOR)

Jequitibá, a brand curated by architect and designer Guilherme Castello Branco — from the CASACOR São Paulo roster — presents the Costanza armchair, an unprecedented collab with Costanza Pascolato that draws on references from the life of the renowned Italo-Brazilian fashion consultant and entrepreneur. With a contemporary design formed by slender, fine lines, the piece features woven leather, and the bouclé cushions ensure sophistication and comfort.

LinBrasil

Paiol Chair, by Sergio Rodrigues, for LinBrasil.

Cadeira Paiol, de Sergio Rodrigues, para a LinBrasil. (La Photo e Divulgação/CASACOR)

Originally created by Sergio Rodrigues as an auditorium chair for the arena of Curitiba’s Teatro Paiol, the Paiol chair gains a new version as a standalone piece in a collab with designer Sergio Fahrer. The base in black electrostatically painted carbon-steel rebar is paired with an upholstered, overlaid seat covered in leather. A detail that lends lightness is the two lateral holes added to the backrest.

lumini

Luminaire pmr, by lumini.

Luminária pmr, da lumini. (Divulgação/CASACOR)

The pmr is a lamp designed by Paulo Mendes da Rocha and reissued in collaboration with Metro Arquitetos. The piece synthesizes a precise formal operation: a folded sheet that integrates the light source into the plane itself, revealing illumination through a minimal structural gesture.

Pedro Luna

Trama Line, by Pedro Luna.

Linha Trama, de Pedro Luna. (Pedro Ocanhas/CASACOR)

The Trama line starts from the weaving of cattail straw and shifts this constructive logic to aluminum and brass. The weave is recorded in cast surfaces that structure the pieces, turning a gesture passed down through generations into permanent matter. The collection brings together six new pieces: a sideboard, coffee table, side tables, and benches.

PROSA

Garatuja Collection, from Prosa Studio.

Coleção Garatuja, do estúdio Prosa. (Guilherme Amaral/CASACOR)

From the Garatuja collection, the sideboard with an organic top and sculpted bases features irregular lines that coexist with precise volumes. The interaction between Muirapiranga (red) and Imbuia woods visually reinforces this conversation (one Amazonian and the other from the Atlantic Forest), creating chromatic and tactile contrasts that broaden the reading of the forms. The studio is led by Júlia Rovigo and Gabriel Pesca.

Sette7

Coffee table Giardino, by Studio Sette7 and St. James.

Mesa de centro Giardino, do Studio Sette7 e St. James. (Divulgação/CASACOR)

The Giardino collection, launched by St. James and designed by Sette7 (sisters Erika and Vivien Coser), expands with pieces such as a coffee table, candlestick, and vase, whose organic forms evoke the silhouette of a flower opening.

Suite Design

In.verso Collection, by Suite Design.

Coleção In.verso, da Suite Design. (Pedro Ocanhas/CASACOR)

In.verso is a furniture collection of ground recycled plastic contrasted with fragments of natural stones, originating from slab leftovers and discards. The 15 pieces — including coffee tables, side tables, a games table, mirrors, and sconces — feature pigmentation that incorporates different compounds and natural elements, such as spices and mineral oxides, capable of altering the color, texture, and porosity of the surfaces — among them, chili, saffron, and clays, which give the pieces their names. The studio is part of the CASACOR São Paulo 2026 roster.

Wooding

Borda Table, by Wooding.

Mesa Borda, da Wooding. (Divulgação/CASACOR)

The brand brings together a set of eight new pieces by Rafael Espíndola. Among the highlights, the Borda coffee table, sculpted from a monolithic block of soapstone weighing about 450 kg, underscores the tension between mass and delicacy.