Exhibitions Furnishing accessories for a touch of character Text by Marilena Pitino Add to bookmarks Ph. credits Daniele Mari Ceramic objects, vases, tables, lamps that can give your home that unique touch, along with a pinch of irony It often takes very little to transform an apparently anonymous room. An object, a lamp or a vase can make for an original and creative space in which to spend happy companionable hours or simply relax. There are design pieces that express our personality and help to make our spaces more comfortable. Objects have a narrative value and the ability to create an ambiance. Here are some of the very latest, catering for all tastes, from the most classic to the most contemporary. BOSA (Pav 4, Stand G 03) Bosa has doubled its Disney collection and come up with Minnie Urban Minerva, designed by Elena Salmistraro, to keep Mickey Forever Young company. She looks like a modern metropolitan divinity, bursting with energy and ultra-fashionable, in fine glazed ceramic. The designer has reinterpreted the style of the most famous cartoon mouse with three-dimensional patterns, metallic colours and shiny and matte special effects, in a look made up of colours and accessories – a short fuchsia jacket, street art leggings, chunky rings and bracelets, the inevitable bow and polka dot skirt, making for an entertaining, super glamorous figure. The Baile Collection is also being showcased, presenting some of Jaime Hayon’s most iconic products: a carousel of vases, small tables and decorative accessories. As if in a playful dance, the Spanish designer’s best-sellers take on graphic signs and bold colours to express his cheerful and imaginative concepts. Baile Collection by Jaime Hayon for BOSA DANESE (Pav 2, Stand B 24) Building Objects are the latest products from Danese designed by Mario Cucinella Architects, produced alongside the masters of glass, marble, solid wood, ceramic, terracotta, brass and textiles. Each object is inspired by a formal or structural architectural detail from a specific building designed by them and thus tell a story while providing different perspectives and unexpected “combinations.” Apax is a shiny brass centrepiece, reminiscent of the Abitazione per la Pace di Scanzano Jonico in Matera. The project was inspired by a single sheet of paper folded Origami-style into the shape of a butterfly. Guastalla, a clay vase produced by 3D printing, was inspired by La Balena nursery school at Guastalla in Reggio Emilia. The body of the vase draws on the sinuous forms of the school, and it was created by rotating and vertically interpreting the cross section of the building. MCV is another centrepiece, created in clay by 3D printing, inspired by the shapes of the hypogeum of the Museum of Etruscan Art - Luigi Rovati Foundation in Milan’s Corso Venezia. Its circularity and the characteristic traits of the museum basement museum are reprised in the sinuous curves of the vase. Building Objects Collection by Mario Cucinella Architects for DANESE Mogg (Pav 03, Stand B 21) VIS a VIS by Mogg, designed by Gregorio Facco, has a powerful graphic impact. A floor lamp that boasts a black-painted solid wood structure and a metal base. A sculptural piece that hogs the limelight. A domestic micro-installation that has lost none of the functional qualities of a light. Mogg’s OLO collection of coffee tables, designed by Antonio Facco, is also being showcased. This family of monolithic wax-finished concrete coffee tables comes in ivory or anthracite. They are modern sculptures that inhabit the living area, creating essential outlines with maximum powers of expression. OLO Collection by Antonio Facco for Mogg SLIDE (Pav 03, Stand E 12) SLIDE’s Ambrogio ironic ‘dumb butler’ was designed by Favaretto & Partners and made from EcoAllene, a new recycled plastic material (derived from Tetrapak) A playful object that’s designed to be appealing while also democratic, ethical and respectful of our planet. There’s also the new Ottocento, signed by Paola Navone, a diminutive coffee table. An object that re-evokes the lines and elegance of 19th century columns, in which the nuances of the stones and marbles are reproposed in pop and mini versions. Ambrogio by Favaretto & Partners for SLIDE JCP Universe (Pav 02, Stand L 09) JCP Universe has come up with the Aboram vase, designed by Sam Baron, in which stone, with its primaeval force and material beauty becomes the base from which metallic extensions grow organically. More than just an ornamental piece, it’s a sculpture open to thousands of interpretations, according to the environment around it. The Agaxa chair, designed by CTRLZAK, is informed by the constant quest for balance between man’s creative power and what nature has to offer. The metal structure is covered with multiple layers of leather designed to create different tones and turn the stool into a precious object. The unworldly beauty of ceramics in a POL sculpture produced exclusively for JCP Universe. Esker is a range of biscuit porcelain vases built from the ruins of ceramic factories. Overlapping layers of material create an iconic shape, full and timeless. A fusion that achieves the primaeval purpose for which man makes ceramics: containing.
Exhibitions Salone del Mobile.Milano 2024: outdoor furnishings combine research, experimentation and innovation C. S. Bontempi Sciama