“As kindred spirits, the Artek and Heath Ceramics teams have when again come together to combine our respective crafts,” says Marianne Goebl, Artek Handling Director. “Developed as a system, the Tile Table collection motivates play and experimentation with color and texture. The results are, our company believe, wonderful practical companions for the home.” The revitalized offering, a first version of which debuted in 2022, is presented in a trio of signature colorways: green, white, and now terracotta red. The latter aligns well with an industry-wide return to moody colors and Art Deco decorations. This third edition stands in the crossway between materiality, personality, and honesty– the wood merely treated, the tiles portable to taste.

A wooden Artek table with four different colored tiled sections, featuring a chessboard and chess pieces arranged for a game.

This extended proposition– the fusing of historic ceramicist Edith Heath’s deftly proportioned and toned tiles with Alvar Aalto’s Table Square– isn’t just visual. The practical, resilient and even hygienic application of totally glazed ceramic tiles as a table finish can’t be neglected. One has just to consider the particularly efficient and cost-effective kitchen counter tops of the 1990s, replaced because by equally sustaining but significantly more expensive natural stones.

A rectangular Artek coffee table with a red tiled top holds a bowl, a book, and a small sculpture. The table stands on a dark rug next to a sofa and another tiled surface in this modern room.

What the joining of these forces ultimately represents is the deft matching of worths. Both boutique heritage manufacturers seldom diverge from the central concepts of beauty, energy, integrity, and longevity. New releases are usually nuanced reinterpretations of long-appreciated classics that go beyond time without always becoming “timeless.” These fresh takes tend to cling to a long-established, underlying understanding of succinct form-finding and undaunted styling that has yet to be exceeded. And any sign of nationwide or local attribution– what might be defined as Finnish and Californian style– is tough to analyze. Nods to their distinct natural settings are implicit, at finest. These skillfully set up and finished styles are absolutely universal; attracting on both a visceral and visual level.

Two light wood Artek tables with tiled tops sit beside a cushioned bench; one table holds books and a small white vase, while sunlight casts gentle shadows across the surfaces.

Where other brand-collabs lean overblown and gimmicky, this collaboration makes good sense. “What keeps us coming back to this [project] with Artek is a shared respect for natural materials– clay, glaze, and wood– and how they react to use gradually,” states Heath Clay Studio Director Tung Chiang. “It’s both an imaginative exchange and a close relationship, rooted in the shared love for thoughtful making.”

An Artek green tiled table with wooden edges sits next to a potted plant, with leafy vines trailing across its surface in natural light.

A small Artek bedside table with a red tiled top holds a glass of water; slippers are on the floor next to a bed in a minimalist room.

A minimalist chess set on a square wooden table, flanked by two round Artek wooden stools with reddish-orange seats, placed on a smooth grey floor against a plain wall.

A small Artek wooden table with a built-in chessboard and neatly arranged white and red chess pieces stands on a plain gray floor.

Two people play a board game with black squares and cone-shaped and cylindrical pieces on a small Artek wooden table.

A hand moves a white chess piece on a minimalist Artek chess board adorned with elegant white and brown cone-shaped pieces.

< img src ="https://design-milk.com/images/2026/03/Heath-Ceramics-Artek-11-1-810x1013.jpg"alt ="A little Artek night table with a red tiled leading holds a glass of water; slippers are on the floor beside a bed in a minimalist space."width=" 810"height="1013"/ >

A person shapes a small clay object on a pottery wheel, using their hands and a tool, with Artek pottery materials and water nearby.

A person shapes wet clay on a pottery wheel, using their hands and a tool to form a narrow, cylindrical vase inspired by the minimalist design of Artek.

A row of unfinished ceramic vases sits on a worktable in a pottery studio, echoing the minimalist style of Artek, with a person working in the blurred background.

Five rook chess pieces, four white and one red, are arranged on a table at Artek, with a person working in the blurred background.

A square grid of 81 frosted glass tiles with a single solid white tile near the top left, framed by a light wooden border in the signature Artek style.

A square grid of red and orange tiles with various shades, framed in a light wooden border inspired by Artek's iconic design aesthetic.

A square grid of blue-green tiles with subtle texture variations, framed by a light wood Artek border. Some tiles have different finishes or patterns.

An included bonus: the Artek + Heath Chess Table. Though the brand recognizes this creative application as a call back to Max Ernst chess table at Villa Mairea– developed by Aino and Alvar Aalto, this ingeniously unforeseen second application seems to have actually naturally emerged from the coherence of tile and

table typologies– an unscripted video game board with segmented tiles doubling as chessboard files. To mark the moment, hand-thrown and hand-glazed ceramic chess pieces were envisioned according to the previously outlined viewpoint. The possibilities of pattern configuration and unforeseen function are ostensibly, limitless.

< img src="https://design-milk.com/images/2026/03/Heath-Ceramics-Artek-14-1-810x752.jpg" alt="A square grid of 81 frosted glass tiles with a single solid white tile near the leading left, framed by a light wood border in the signature Artek design." width="810" height="752"/ >< img src="https://design-milk.com/images/2026/03/Heath-Ceramics-Artek-19-1-810x792.jpg" alt="A square grid of red and orange tiles with numerous tones, framed in a light wood border inspired by Artek's iconic style visual." width="810" height="792"/ > To find out more about the brands associated with this spirited cooperation, go to artek.fi and heathceramics.com. Photography by Derek Yarra and thanks to Heath Ceramics. Adrian Madlener is a Brussels-born, New York-based author concentrating on collectible and sustainable style.

With a particular focus on topics that exemplify the very best in craft-led experimentation, he’s committed to supporting talents that push the envelope in numerous disciplines.

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