Hering Berlin has unveiled a new site-specific installation, EQUINOX I, at Salone Raritas 2026 in Milan, marking a notable debut within a newly introduced format dedicated to collectible design.
The presentation forms part of the 64th edition of Salone del Mobile.Milano, one of the most influential fixtures in the global design calendar. Hosted at Fiera Milano from 21 to 26 April 2026, the installation reflects a growing commercial and cultural interest in limited-edition design pieces that sit outside mass production.
Hering Berlin is currently presenting EQUINOX I at Salone Raritas on the occasion of the 64th edition of Salone del Mobile.Milano — a widely acclaimed site-specific installation. The newly introduced format is dedicated to exceptional, non-serial positions in the field of Collectible Design and provides the ideal context for the work, which was developed in close collaboration between Austrian artist Hans Weigand and German ceramic artist and designer Stefanie Hering.
The collaboration signals a continued shift among premium design houses towards interdisciplinary partnerships, combining fine art practices with high-end craftsmanship. Industry observers note that such collaborations are increasingly being positioned not only as artistic ventures but also as strategic brand statements aimed at collectors and investors seeking exclusivity and narrative-driven design.
Limited editions and material storytelling define EQUINOX I
At the core of EQUINOX I is a unifying visual language that integrates image, object and spatial experience. The installation draws on a woodcut-based pictorial structure created by Hans Weigand, which is translated across multiple material formats throughout the exhibition.
EQUINOX I unites image, object and space into an inseparable whole. At its core is a woodcut-based pictorial structure by Hans Weigand, which runs through the entire installation in various material forms: as an image-bearing surface of a table in a limited edition of 5 pieces, as a motif on bisque porcelain plates by Hering Berlin in cobalt blue — presented in collector’s boxes with 6 different motifs, limited to 24 sets — and in individually developed porcelain light objects. EQUINOX I positions Collectible Design as a field of cultural reflection, in which value is created not through rarity alone, but through narrative depth, material precision and authorship.
The commercial model underpinning the installation reflects a broader trend within the collectible design sector, where scarcity and storytelling are leveraged to enhance perceived value. Limited runs — including five tables and 24 boxed plate sets — align with the expectations of high-net-worth collectors, while reinforcing brand positioning at the intersection of art and design.
For Hering Berlin, the launch of EQUINOX I within Salone Raritas provides both a platform for experimentation and a strategic entry into a format specifically curated for non-serial design work. The initiative underscores how established design brands are adapting to shifting market dynamics, where differentiation increasingly depends on authorship, craftsmanship and conceptual depth rather than scale.
As Salone del Mobile.Milano continues to evolve, formats such as Salone Raritas highlight the growing importance of niche, high-value segments within the wider design economy. EQUINOX I, as presented by Hering Berlin, exemplifies how collectible design is being positioned not merely as a product category, but as a vehicle for cultural and commercial storytelling within the global marketplace.







