Giant disco ball, 1970s

1,350 USD

A large-scale disco ball from the 1970s, measuring 80 cm in diameter, originally suspended above a nightclub dance floor.

More than decorative, the disco ball functioned as a central feature of the era’s nightlife architecture, shaping how bodies, light, and space interacted. Its presence above the dance floor established a visual rhythm, reinforcing the collective energy below.

Well-preserved, its mirrored surface retains the reflective clarity that once animated the room, offering a direct link to the sensory atmosphere of the period.

GIANT DISCO BALL, 1970S

Giant disco ball, 1970s

1,350 USD

A large-scale disco ball from the 1970s, measuring 80 cm in diameter, originally suspended above a nightclub dance floor.

More than decorative, the disco ball functioned as a central feature of the era’s nightlife architecture, shaping how bodies, light, and space interacted. Its presence above the dance floor established a visual rhythm, reinforcing the collective energy below.

Well-preserved, its mirrored surface retains the reflective clarity that once animated the room, offering a direct link to the sensory atmosphere of the period.

GIANT DISCO BALL, 1970S
Giant 1970s disco ball with an 80cm diameter, its mirrored surface remarkably well-preserved.
GIANT DISCO BALL, 1970S GIANT DISCO BALL, 1970S

REMEMBERING STUDIO 54

Amid the madness of late-‘70s New York, a spark had emerged, soaring through the sky like a comet until it burned to dust. Studio 54, the most legendary nightclub ever known, was founded by college buddies Steve Rubell and Ian Schrager, who transformed a former midtown TV studio into a pleasure palace for the senses that took the Warholian ideal of celebrity to new heights, where everyone was a star in their own right.

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THE SUPER SEVENTIES

If Origins marked a return to first principles, our second curated collection of archival gems turns toward a moment of pure release, an era when form gave way to feeling and spectacle became a way of life. With this second offering from Réserve, we step into the charged atmosphere of late-1970s New York, where the boundaries between nightlife, art, music, and cinema dissolved into a single, shimmering continuum.

At the center of it all stood Studio 54, the legendary nightclub that for a brief and incandescent period, became both sanctuary and stage: a place where identities were invented, hierarchies unraveled, and excess became a work of art. Beneath its velvet rope, a new mythology took shape defined by glamour and abandon, exclusivity and iconography.

The Super Seventies draws from this fevered convergence, assembling a tightly edited offering of rare spectacles that embody the era’s sense of elegance, irreverence, and provocation. These are objects shaped by a cultural moment where disco met downtown, fashion became performance, and the night offered myriad ways of escape.

Anchored by styles that channel the personalities and provocations of Studio 54 and its orbit—from Bianca Jagger’s commanding presence to the electric pulse of the dance floor itself—this collection captures a time when seeing and being seen were acts of equal consequence. Here, the archive does not simply remember, it revels…

Each Reserve collectible is thoughtfully custom-packaged to Jacques Marie Mage standards, with tailored care to each artifact. Each collectible is accompanied by a JMM Certificate of Authenticity and ID card.