



A single Anatolian walnut slab. Clear gallery-grade resin. Crafted to be quiet and solid.
The Monolith is a credenza built on structural weight and minimal intervention. It begins with a single, massive slab of century-old Anatolian walnut, hand-selected for its dense grain and dark tones, preserving the completely natural live edge of the timber. Alongside this solid wood, we pour a line of clear, gallery-grade resin. It is a precise balance of wood and light—nothing more. Your eyes stay entirely on the timber.
The solid wood and resin top rests on a custom-fabricated structural steel base. The leg design is open and minimal—engineered to visually disappear beneath the credenza so the immense weight and character of the solid timber remain the central focus. The metal is finished with a matte architectural coating to eliminate unwanted reflections.
Every credenza is an individual, custom commission built to order.
Standard Proportions: 20" x 86.6" x 34.2" | 51 x 220 x 87 cm
Tailored Sizes: Fully customizable to fit your exact spatial layout.
Resin Character: Tailored across our signature palette—from water-clear and quiet mist to deep, translucent obsidian.
The Artisenza Process: We do not build in isolation. We share detailed photos directly from our Ankara workshop as your piece takes shape. Before the final polish, you review and approve the composition.
From initial order to final delivery takes 5 to 7 weeks. True craftsmanship cannot be accelerated. The heavy, deep-pour resin requires a slow, controlled curing environment to ensure absolute stability, followed by multi-stage hand-polishing. We do not rush.
For the United States, Europe, and the United Kingdom: shipping is fully cleared via DDP (Delivered Duty Paid). All customs duties, import clearances, and local taxes are prepaid by our house. Your credenza is secured inside a reinforced wooden gallery crate and delivered via premium air freight, arriving within 2 to 5 business days from shipment.
Note: No two pieces are identical. The unique grain and contours of the walnut dictate the final form. We simply follow the wood.