Antonio Attolini Lack was a visionary Mexican architect known for his bold modernist language and deep sensitivity to space, material, and ritual. With a career rooted in Mexico City, his work bridged architecture and object, scale and intimacy — shaping environments with a sculptural, almost spiritual clarity. The pieces presented here reflect his lesser-known yet powerful explorations in furniture and object design, where form becomes both functional and architectural gesture.
Design
Designed in the 1980s, the Manzarín rug translates architectural rhythm into woven form. Its bold geometric pattern draws from vernacular Mexican motifs and mid-century abstraction, creating a surface that is both graphic and grounded.
Woven with precision, the rug’s textural presence anchors a space with warmth and structure. More than a functional element, the Manzarín reflects Attolini’s vision of design as a continuous field — where pattern, place, and identity converge.