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Office Rounds Up Milan Design Week

Rooms Studio’s 'Palace of Rituals'

 

The Georgian design duo of Nata Janberidze and Keti Toloraia presented ‘Palace of Rituals’, a one-night-only, site-specific installation and dance party at quintessential Milanese jaunt, Osteria del Treno, orchestrated by art practice, Scalzo Archivio. Two new pieces from the studio’s Dowry Series — the Copper and Silver Hand-stitched Quilts depicting female symbols such as the rose, swan, and egg — hung from the balcony, while guests gathered on the ground floor dancing the night away to the sounds of legendary electronic musician Alexander Robotnick. At midnight, cavalier Silver Massarenti appeared on a white horse for a dressage performance, blurring the lines of reality and imagination.

 

'Bal d’Afrique' by Dozie Kanu

 

For Byredo’s debut at Salone, founder Ben Gorham entrusted his friend, Nigerian-American artist Dozie Kanu, to offer a fresh outlook on the Bal d'Afrique fragrance, one of his first, inspired by his late father’s travel diaries. Combining architecture, art and photography, Kanu’s presentation explored the intimacies that have shaped his relationship with the African continent and Afro-Diasporic culture. Housed inside the buzzy Spazio Maiocchi, the installation opened with a vitrine of candid everyday life photographs from the Saman Archive, a repository of photographic negatives from across Ghana. In the main space sat Kanu’s first architecturally-scaled work, a cross-shaped pavilion inspired by his most recent trip to Senegal throughout which were interspersed pieces from his practice through the years.

 

SIDE GALLERY presented Devon Turnbull and Willo Perron’s 'Listening Room'

 

KALEIDOSCOPE's new sibling publication Capsule put together perhaps one of the most impressive line-ups for their inaugural Capsule Plaza collective exhibition. Barcelona gallery SIDE presented an all-new, handmade sound system and acoustically-considered space by New York-based “speaker sculptor” Devon Turnbull, founder of high-end audio company OJAS. The sound experience was complete with a striking XL "Sausage Sofa" by Los Angeles-based multi-talented designer, creative director and Capsule issue 2 cover star, Willo Perron. The larger-than-life piece, flanked by two Paulin, Paulin, Paulin sky blue Groovy chairs, provided a space for attendees to fully immerse themselves in the listening sessions offered throughout the week and to take a much-needed moment of respite from gallivanting around the city.  

 

Frank Maria’s 'Real Beetle in Epoxy' for GUBI

 

Ten years ago, young studio GamFratesi made their Salone debut with the Beetle Chair. If it started off as a creative experiment, the piece rapidly became a modern icon of design, produced and distributed globally by GUBI. A decade later, the Danish company invited ten promising talents to pay tribute to GamFratesi’s piece. Austrian artist Frank Maria’s ‘Real Beetle in Epoxy’ is a bubbly re-interpretation of the original thought of as an archaeological sculpture – like a beetle preserved in epoxy resin – encrusted with mineral sediments and adorned with original tattoo designs and micro-landscapes, a nod to his practice as a tattoo artist.

 

 

 

Sophie Lou Jacobsen and In Common With’s 'Bar Flora'

 

New York-based lighting studio In Common With and French-American designer Sophie Lou Jacobsen hosted three nights of aperitivo at "Bar Flora" inside local favorite spot Palinurobar. For the first European presentation of their collaborative collection Flora – an artful celebration of classic Venetian glassmaking techniques – they had fun zhuzhing up the interiors of the classic Milanese wine bar, by placing their colorful fazzoletto (Italian for napkin) lights throughout. Friends old and new flocked to the intimate space and the pop-up culminated on its third and final night with an impromptu after-hours dance party that not even a storm managed to dampen.

 

Umberto Bellardi Ricci for Tacchini

 

Storied Italian design giants over at Tacchini added German-Italian architect, sculptor, and designer Umberto Bellardi Ricci to their roster, alongside the likes of Mario Bellini, Achille Castiglioni and Tobia Scarpa. Together they introduced new versions of some of Bellardi Ricci’s most acclaimed designs, notably his sculptural Mano and Fackel lights, Trono stools and Torus ottomans, in a variety of shapes and colorful fabric options. A natural extension of the New York-based designer’s work, the new pieces carry through his intent to explore the spatial aspects of sculpture through the lens of architecture.

 

Klemens Schillinger and Louis De Belle’s 'Musterzimmer' at Studio di pittura


Milanse art residency “Studio di pittura” invited Klemens Schillinger to take over their exhibition-meet-work-meet-live space for the duration of Salone. The Viennese designer imagined a pilot room, in German musterzimmer, in which he displayed his latest pieces – a collection of spirited objects including a broom with a hook, a lightbulb floor lamp on wheels and a paper basket taking on the octagonal shape of the room – in tandem with large format photographs by Louis De Belle depicting mundane scenes from the surrounding Piazza Loreto neighborhood.

 

 

Grace Prince’s 'Displaced Line' at Oxilia Gallery


For Displaced Line, her debut at Oxilia Gallery, British designer on the rise, Grace Prince, set out to explore the tension that lies between static objects. In an ascetic setting conceived in tandem with Italian artist Beatrice Bonino, she showcased three new pieces – a bench, a paravent and a candle holder – along with a series of decorative belts made in collaboration with Bonino. By just employing two types of wood (douglas fir and palo santo) and three types of metal (aluminum, stainless steel and iron), Prince’s furniture is a crystallization of her practice, an exploration of the poetics of fragile gestures harnessed in functional design. Her work, restrained in its expression yet bold in its intention is in fact an exquisite display of craftsmanship – while her pieces may recall the work of readymade artists, each individual part is meticulously handcrafted by the designer herself with the help of entrusted artisans. An ode to patience and experimentation, her singular approach has contributed to Prince being selected as one of AD100’s top designers for 2023 and joining architect Anne Holtrop’s team as a material researcher in his ETH design studio in Zurich, where she currently resides.

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