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Ettore Sottsass - Carlton cabinet, 1981 Aldo
Cibic, Andrea Branzi, Michele De Lucchi, Marco Zanini, Nathalie Du
Pasquier, George Sowden, Matteo Thun, Martine Bedin and Ettore Sottsass in
Masanori Umeda’s boxing ring bed from the first Memphis collection in
1981 George SOWDEN (GB) -tablewatches – 1981 Martine BEDIN (FR) -
lamp "Super" - 1981
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Het London Design Museum heeft naar aanleiding van de 20e verjaardag van de geboorte van Memphis - de beruchte groep Italiaanse designers geleid door Ettore Sottsass - een tentoonstelling opgezet met representatieve meubelen en andere design-objecten. The
London Design Museum has celebrated the 20th anniversary of the birth of
Memphis, the famous group of Italian designers guided by Ettore Sottsass ,
with an exhibition of representive furniture and other design-objects. This
retrospective that marks a renewed interest for the 1980 esthetics also
analyses its influence on contemporary design and architecture In
1981 at the Milan Furniture Fair, the world of design was shattered,
visitors discovered after years of rationalism a collection of
strange furniture with flashily
coloured plastic laminates emblazoned with kitsch geometric and
leopard-skin patterns usually found in 1950s comic books or cheap cafés. Jasper
Morrison, Marc Newson and others who were students at that time, were
deeply influenced by these new visions on design. Jasper
Morrison remembers breaking into "a kind of cold sweat" and a
"feeling of shock and panic" when he stumbled into the opening
of a design exhibition at the Arc ’74 showroom in Milan on 18 September
1981. "It was the weirdest feeling," he recalled years later,
"you were in one sense repulsed by the objects, or I was, but also
immediately freed by the sort of total rule-breaking." Sottsass
and his collaborators were thinking about the creation of a New
International Style. A style that would poke fun at the defensive
stockades, the barriers and enclosures that littered the landscape of
design in Italy that confined the universe of objects to the geometry of
good design. This sort of ‘prohibition’ was to be replaced by a
sensibility that was half Art Déco half Pop, appealing part to an élite
taste, and part populist, half serious half tongue in cheek. It was based
on an acceptance that the imagery of even the highest culture is sooner or
later consumed by the everyday world. Memphis
was splashed across magazines worldwide. There were exhibitions in London,
Los Angeles, Tokyo, San Francisco, New York and back in Milan. But
Sottsass became increasingly disillusioned with Memphis and the media
circus around it, in 1985 he announced that he was leaving the collective. The
talents that formed the group or rather collaborated with it, even if only
once, were exceptional. They have continued to produce objects and
architecture, that is usually of consistently high and sometimes extremely
innovatory, quality. "What,
after all this, is the purpose of Memphis?". |
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© 2002 - D-SIDE - België - email : d-side@pandora.be |