Saturday, April 30, 2016

Fuori Salone 2016 - Seen in Milano

 
Fuori Salone 2016 - Seen in Milano 
Torre Velasca by Ingo Maurer

Pas Leccese and John Giorno

Luisa delle Piane
 


Mario Milana



Tommaso Fantoni Borsani
 
Alberto Meda and Bartolomeo Bellati
 
Stefano Venier

Formafantasma - Andrea Trimarchi and Simone Farresin
 

Gianantonio Locatelli, Luca Cipelletti, Arthur Arbesser and Fabio Giglio
 
Andrea Crosta di Moncalvo
 
Uberta Zambeletti and Alessandra Piccaluga




Giovanna Zucconi
 
  Tyler Hays

 

Apparatus – Jeremy Anderson and Gabriel Hendifar


Sam Baron
 

Idarica Gazzoni and Annamaria Sbisa

   
Barbara Frua de Angeli

 
Servomuto – Francesca De Giorgi and Alessandro Poli



Scilla Craxi and Gianna Farina
 
 
Milano – Torre Velasca and San Lorenzo






 



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Milano: Fuori Salone 2016 – Palazzo Serbelloni – Lasvit – Via Lucis


 
Photograph courtesy Lasvit

Milano: Fuori Salone 2016 – Palazzo Serbelloni – Lasvit – Via Lucis. In the splendid rooms of Palazzo Serbelloni Lasvit presented “Via Lucis”, a journey through unique and contemporary projects enhanced by the experience and the skills of master glassmakers. Past meets the future in this setting where renowned names alongside Czech legends as well as young designers reinterpret the neoclassical taste of chandeliers with a contemporary twist by combining Czech glassmakers’ artisanal know-how and craftsmanship.
Above. Petra Krausova and Libor Sostak – Intergalactic. This dynamic lighting sculpture is made of bright green uranium glass, pulsing with changing light like an asteroid entering the atmosphere. The Intergalactic blends ancient history and nature with inventive design, fine craftsmanship and modern technology.

Photograph courtesy Lasvit
 
Lasvit – Via Lucis

Raja Schwahn-Reichmann - Omnia Vincit Amor
Photograph courtesy Lasvit
Lasvit – Via Lucis

Jakub Berdych – Empress
Inspired by the traditional shape of chandeliers popular during the reign of Empress Maria Theresa, this contemporary reflection on the iconic style brings refreshing new details.
   
Lasvit – Via Lucis


Daniel Liberskind – Ice Vases
 Photograph courtesy Lasvit

Lasvit – Via Lucis

Maxim Velcovsky – Memento Mori
The macabre Czech masterpiece known as the Sedlec Ossuary is one of twelve World Heritage Sites in the Czech Republic. It contains approximately of between 40,000 to 70,000 skeletons whose bones were artistically arranged by Frantisek Rint to form chapel decorations in 1870. Maxim Velcovsky pays homage to Rint’s actual bone chandeliers by imprinting their shapes into a glass form. The Latin phrase Memento Mori, reminding us to ‘remember death,’ became the essence of this object. It symbolizes birth and death as well as the disappearing crafts that are passed from generation to generation in Europe.
 
Lasvit – Via Lucis

Campana Brothers – Candy
Inspired by popular candies found in Brazilian markets, the Candy Collection combines playful colors and patterns of South America with traditional Bohemian craftsmanship.

  Palazzo Serbelloni -  Family Crest
 
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Friday, April 29, 2016

Milano: Fuori Salone 2016 – Bisazza – Studio Job

  photograph courtesy Bisazza

"We want to create a collection that is exclusive for the quality of the material and technique. Through the skeletons, violent and innocent, their direct graphic forms depict our times, which are extravagant and violent...”

Studio Job
Milano: Fuori Salone 2016 – Bisazza – Studio Job. At the flagship showroom Bisazza presented new decorative mosaics marked by a decidedly contemporary vibe, designed by the Studio Job duo: Job Smeets and Nynke Tynagel.
Above. The Perished design embodies the neo-Gothic style. A graphic motif featuring animal skeletons portrays a taunting danse macabre. Created using a digital technique.


Rossella Bisazza
 
 




Studio Job - Job Smeets and Nynke Tynagel


 photograph courtesy Bisazza


Bisazza – Studio Job.  In the Silhouette Turquoise pattern, we once again see the extremely personal, poetic expression of the Antwerp pair. Attentive research into detail and the “playful”, unexpected overlapping of everyday objects and figures of a different nature create a three-dimensional, hyper-decorated pattern.



Marcel Wanders



Ferruccio Laviani


photograph courtesy Bisazza


Bisazza – Studio Job. The Industry Amber decorative motif alludes to Britain’s Industrial Revolution of the 1800s. In a modern and decidedly singular texture, symbolic objects from that period -- including steam engines, locomotive wheels, work tools and industrial buildings -- are juxtaposed, lending an effect of depth and wrought in warm shades of amber.  





 
 



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