There's something deeply satisfying about a piece that knows exactly what it is. The Cagla Wooden Panel on Stand is a single arc of hand-carved teak — a cresting wave of scrolling acanthus leaves, curling volutes, and layered botanical flourishes — mounted on a slim black wooden base that lets it sit upright on any flat surface. No wall mounting required. No fuss. Just place it and let it do its thing.
The carving is refined and symmetrical, flowing outward from a central drooping leaf motif into mirrored spirals of foliage that sweep toward the scalloped edges. It has the look of an ornamental pediment — the kind you'd find crowning a doorway or headboard in a grand old Indian or European home — but reimagined here as a standalone tabletop sculpture.
The natural teak finish is warm, muted, and quietly rich, with a soft grey-brown tone that speaks of age and restraint rather than flash.And that contrast with the dark black base is what ties it all together. The base is clean, minimal, and modern — a steady, grounding line beneath all that organic movement above. It's the kind of pairing that makes the carving feel intentional and curated, not salvaged and forgotten.
Place it on a mantelpiece, a console table, a bookshelf, or the centre of a dining table. The Cagla works in spaces that lean classic, but it's equally at home in a contemporary room that needs a single object with real presence and texture.