Stories Francesco Meda: “My design? I never start with a shape in mind” Text by Patrizia Malfatti Add to bookmarks The Milanese designer focuses on design geared to purpose, less trend-led. He also explores art-design and self-production and takes his own particular approach to materials. His visionary feel for the contemporary and his passion for the history of design saw him appointed creative director of the Acerbis brand in 2020, along with the Spanish designer David Lopez Quincoces. Born in 1984, he studied Industrial Design at the IED in Milan, the city where he was born, before moving to London. He spent two years there, working in the studios of Sebastian Bergne and Ross Lovegrove. On his return to Milan, he started working with Alberto Meda, his father. Meanwhile, he also explored art/design with other companies and galleries, such as Nilufar and Rossana Orlandi, Mint, and the Schoeni Art Gallery in Hong Kong. His collection Orme Cinesi was exhibited at the Lane Crawford department store in Hong Kong, and later at the Schoeni Art Gallery in 2012-13 during the Hong Kong Art Fair. He began to produce his own work in 2013, making LED lamps, marble tables (his favourite material), benches and 3D-printed jewellery. The latter, along with the Bridge lamps, are now in the Triennale Design Museum collection. Also in 2013, he and Alberto Meda designed the Flap acoustic panel for Caimi Brevetti, which netted the 2015 German Design Award, the Design Europa Award and the 2016 Compasso d’Oro. They won the 2016 Best of NeoCon Silver Award for their Sipario modular sound-absorbing system, again for Caimi Brevetti. Francesco Meda’s ash chair Woody for Molteni & C. won the 2019 Wallpaper Design Award. His stand-out quality: a particular approach to materials filtered through a fluid and essential language. Woody by Francesco Meda for Molteni & C. If you had a crystal ball, how would you see the future for design? I hope companies and designers would be more sensitive when it comes to developing products that respond more fully to real needs and that they would use production processes, given that not all materials are finite. The kind of design aimed at things people actually need, and less focused on products that follow the “trends.” As well as working for leading design brands, such as Caimi Brevetti, Citterio, Colos, Dada, Gandia Blasco, Kartell, Molteni&C, Riva 1920, and Zucchetti – and fashion brands, like Tod's, Ferragamo and the innovative Volta Footwear – you have created one-off pieces for galleries. In 2013 you began to explore self-production and 3D printing, even producing jewellery. How do you see your future: like a Renaissance workshop or like a digitised laboratory? I would describe my current and my future studios as “digitised Renaissance workshops.” At the moment, my father and I share the studio. We also adopt a workshop rationale as regards the “transfer of knowledge,” but also take a powerfully contemporary approach to innovation, in terms of technologies such as 3D printers and scanners and parametric software that enables us to analyse every single part of the design process. Working in the studio with my father has been a great boon, because before I joined him in 2008, he had always worked on his own. I worked as his assistant for the first few years. It was like a fast-track Masters! Our business is like a “workshop,” there’s a transfer of knowledge. Now we each work on our own things, and every so often we do something collaborative. It’s a very stimulating interchange because it gives my father a chance to look at the world through a young person’s eyes. The working relationship between father and son is always very delicate, but underlying it all there’s the respect and generosity of a father who has never been stood in my way, on the contrary he’s been very direct, sincere and hugely stimulating. Aledin by Alberto and Francesco Meda for Kartell Your first experience, after you finished your studies, was in London with Sebastian Bergne and Ross Lovegrove. What did you pick up from them? After London, you decided to retrace your steps and go back to Milan. Why? London was a seminal experience because it enabled me to witness two very different set-ups. Sebastian Bergne’s studio was very small, we were two collaborators and we worked on very different projects. We designed for large brands but ,that notwithstanding, Sebastian was one of the first designers to pursue the concept of self-production. This experience helped me understand how to create a product without the backing of a company. We designed, we made prototypes, we looked for suppliers, we produced small batches and we also had to deal with the communication and distribution side of things. It was a 360° lesson in understanding the life and production cycle of an object. Ross Lovegrove’s studio, was highly structured, with 12-15 collaborators, and we worked with the leading brands. Some of the projects were visionary ones for the time – concepts for vehicles fuelled by solar panels, wind turbines, lamps using OLED technology etc. It was a laboratory of innovation and Ross always inspired us to ratchet up the level of experimentation. It was a hugely important experience on a human level too because I learned to work as a team with people from different cultures. I decided to come back to Milan because I asked my father (who had always worked on his own) if he wanted an assistant! It was a huge opportunity for growth … and also an opportunity for exchange and comparison for my father, given that I introduced him to 3D design, which I’d learned about while I was in London. His particular character enabled us to build up a relationship based on mutual respect, and this attitude meant that we are still sharing the same space today. Each with our own clients, but we often work on things together. You say that your designs are guided by the materials. Noble materials like marble, in particular – I’m thinking about Split, the collection of tables, coffee tables and console tables and the primitive Pigreco stool, with its intrinsic uniqueness and imperfection. What is it about marble that makes it magnetic and fascinating? I was fascinated by the idea of using such a noble yet heavy and fragile material. I decided to carve the Pigreco stool from a block using a diamond blade. I discovered that the company I was working with, Henraux, a leader in the coverings sector, produced a lot of waste material, so I decided to create a block made up of lots of marbles, a sandwich of layers. The resulting object generated a new and unexpected sort of look. I was fascinated by the colour of these marbles and by working with the slabs, and decided to design tables that responded to the current demands of clients. I couldn’t make heavy, immovable tables that couldn’t be taken apart, so I decided to split the slabs in two – hence the name, Split – and hold them together with a brass profile that highlights the division. The metal supporting structure allows the legs and slabs to be fixed in situ. Pigreco by Francesco Meda for Luce di Carrara You favour simple, organic and fluid lines where a genuine relationship is set up between the parts and the object and the end user, reminiscent of the Far East, also given your wide use of interlocking techniques. Where does this stylistic element come from? I never start with a shape in mind because I believe designs come together as you go along, within the constraints of the material and the technology being employed. I always try to use as little material as possible, and this approach makes for a “calm” look that doesn’t “jar”. The issue of the relationship between the components is extremely important because it determines an attention to detail and an organic approach to the juxtapositions. Nature is an extreme example of the elegant integration of parts. One of the most sought-after qualities in contemporary design is flexibility. Modular, multi-tasking furniture that makes for a different home living experience. Take the Sistema XY for Dada, one of its latest projects, for example. When I think about a product, I have to take a flexible approach to its many potential facets and to its variety of uses. One always tries to create a product that allows for flexibility both from the company’s point of view and from that of the end client. Flexibility, along with customisation, allows for different material configurations that generate different looks, as in Sistema XY: wood makes for a warmer look, stainless steel makes for a more industrial and technical one. In this particular case, the brief from Dada was clear-cut: to design an accessorised system that would go with all the kitchens in the catalogue. The main problem was coming up with a functional and cross-cutting product that could be created using a simple, non-invasive method of construction, so that it would slot seamlessly into the existing kitchens. I started by envisaging a new type of use for the kitchen, achieved through the integration of different accessories. Sistema XY develops vertically and horizontally by means of different extruded profiles that allow the shelves to slide (vertically) and horizontal profiles onto which the accessorised sinks are mounted. Making all the different profiles was complicated because they combine different functions and must not look invasive, equally they have to be structural elements that hold up the entire system. I worked a lot with the technical department to define aesthetic and structural details. It also proved hard to make for easy assembly, because the system is made up of numerous components that have to “dialogue” with each other, like in a machine. Sistema XY by Francesco Meda for Dada - Photo by Tiziano Sartorio Let’s start from the beginning, with your father, Alberto. A demanding or a stimulating legacy? What are the differences and similarities, disagreements and complicities between these two different generations? Better with just one pair of hands or with two? My relationship with my father, a designer/mechanical engineer, is without doubt the most stimulating thing because it gives me access to specific knowledge in terms of techniques and processes, but more importantly he has really helped me to nurture a constructive, rather than a formal, approach to design. Flat (a sound-absorbing panel) is an example of a project carried out by two pairs of hands, in which two different approaches come together – mine is more graphic, his is more technical – to try and work out the hinge mechanism that allows the panel to be turned in different directions. The combination of approaches informed an extremely decorative product, which is also technical and functional and solves the problem of sound pollution inside spaces such as restaurants, schools, hospitals and other public places. This is an example of a project carried out by two pairs of hands in which the intergenerational exchange has conferred added value in every sense! Flap by Alberto e Francesco Meda for Caimi Split by Francesco Meda Bridge by Francesco Meda - Photo by Miro Zagnoli Snap by Francesco Meda for Et al. 12 July 2021 Share
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