Vico Magistretti (1920-2006)

Innovative architect, industrial designer, and urban planner Vico Magistretti was a driving force in Italian design from the 1960s onwards. Born into a family of successful Milanese architects in 1920, he became one of Italy’s most respected designers, celebrated for an uncanny mastery of clarity of form.

Vico Magistretti
Vico Magistretti

Image source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vico_Magistretti#/media/File:Vico_Magistretti_ritratto.jpg

Biography

Vico Magistretti (October 6, 1920 – September 19, 2006) was one of Italy’s most influential industrial designer, known as a furniture designer and architect and primarily for his iconic modern furniture and lighting designs for Artemide. In 1920 Vico Magistretti was born in Milan, the city in which he graduated in architecture in 1945, and where his professional career has spun its story ever since, chiefly in the fields of architecture, town planning and industrial design. The first recognition of his work came in 1948, when he won the Gran Premio at the 8th Triennale.

After that came almost forty years of activity with other prizes and awards in recognition of Magistretti’s work in various sectors in different countries. Giving lessons and lectures in various faculties of architecture and schools of design in Italy and abroad, from Milan to New York, from Paris to London, a city to which he is particularly devoted, he has been an “Honorary Fellow” of the Royal College of Art since 1983. Furniture, lamps and other objects that he designed may be found all over the world and the most important design museums have given exhibitions in his honour and kept examples of his work in their permanent collections.

Carimate Chair designed by Vico Magistretti in 1959 and produced by Cassina.
Carimate Chair designed by Vico Magistretti in 1959 and produced by Cassina

Image source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vico_Magistretti#/media/File:Carimate_Chair_Vico_Magistretti_Cassina_Austin_Calhoon_Photograph.jpg

Throughout the course of his career, Magistretti held prestigious professorships at the Royal College of Arts in London and the Domus Academy in Milan. His work has been acquired by important museums around the world, including MoMA New York and the Victoria & Albert in London.

Designer

Vico Magistretti’s research has been continuous – into design, the culture of the project and innovative experimentation with materials and space solutions, not to mention shapes and functions far from the rigours of fashion that they have passed through during the years. He started designing for Cassina in 1960, and from that date on his signature is to be found on very many products.

Maralunga sofa by Vico Magistretti for Cassina, 1970s.
Maralunga sofa by Vico Magistretti for Cassina, 1970s

Image source:https://www.cassina.com/it/en/products/maralunga-40.html?coatingItem=E-E447#675-maralunga-40_26025

We recall in particular the Maralunga sofa of 1973 and the Nuvola Rossa (1977) bookcase, which are still indisputable international best-sellers and have provoked hordes of imitations which have not been able to echo even faintly the success of the originals.

Vico Magistretti, Nuvola Rossa Bookshelf.
Vico Magistretti, Nuvola Rossa Bookshelf, 1977 for Cassina

Image source: http://thejupital.com/life-beyond-the-ordinary/8modi/

Bookshelf, circa 1946.
Bookshelf, circa 1946, by Vico Magistretti

Image source: https://www.artsy.net/artwork/vico-magistretti-bookshelf

No matter what materials were used, Magistretti always attached great importance to high quality workmanship.For a design solution to be long-lasting and of high quality, Vico Magistretti felt it had to be both beautiful and useful. His designs invariably link sculptural elegance with technical sophistication.

Eclisse table lamp by Vico Magistretti for Artemide. Designed by Magistretti in 1967.
Eclisse table lamp by Vico Magistretti for Artemide. Designed by Magistretti in 1967

Image source: https://search.creativecommons.org/photos/e0c9861a-e823-4abc-82ad-b4a050afecae

From the 1960s Vico Magistretti designed furniture and objects of plastic. His “Telegono” table lamp dates from 1968. Magistretti created “Selene” (1969; for Artemide), a plastic stackable chair moulded in one piece. The Magistretti chairs “Gaudì” and “Vicario” were designed in 1970. In 1977 Vico Magistretti created “Atollo“, a metal table lamp. In 1983 he designed “Veranda“, a convertible sofa that is equipped with an adjustable headrest.

"Selene" chair, 1969, Triennale Design Museum.
Vico Magistretti, ‘”Selene” chair, 1969, Triennale Design Museum

Image source: https://www.artsy.net/artwork/vico-magistretti-selene-chair

Architect

According to The Guardian, “He soon came under the influence of the architect Ernesto Nathan Rogers, whose humanist ideas for the reconstruction of postwar Italy inspired a whole series of intellectuals. At that time Magistretti took part in work on the extraordinary experimental neighbourhood on the edge of Milan known as QT8, where a group of architects and planners were given complete freedom. Magistretti built its “poetic” round church.”

Villa Arosio, Arenzano (1958).
Villa Arosio, Arenzano (1958). Photo by Paolo Monti, 1959.

Image source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vico_Magistretti#/media/File:Paolo_Monti_-_Servizio_fotografico_(Arenzano,_1959)_-_BEIC_6356024.jpg

Everything seemed possible in the Milan of the 1940s and 1950s, and architects and planners of the quality of Magistretti, Ignazio Gardella and Rogers (with the BBPR group) collaborated on working-class neighbourhoods, including an estate for Pirelli workers. These stand out even today for the humanist qualities of their design, and for their green space.

Torre del Parco, Milan (1953-56, with Franco Longoni).
Torre del Parco, Milan (1953-56, with Franco Longoni). Photo by Paolo Monti.

Image source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vico_Magistretti#/media/File:Paolo_Monti_-_Servizio_fotografico_-_BEIC_6340520.jpg

Among his most important architectural work in Milan during this period we can cite the Torre al Parco (1953-56), the Corso Europa office building (1955-57) and the Piazzale Aquilea building (1962-64). There followed a number of villas, including Arosio house in Arenzano (1958), Schubert villa in Ello (1960), Bassetti house in Azzate (1960) and Gardella house in Arenzano (1953). Finally, the apartment building at Piazza San Marco in Milan dates back to 1969-1971. His more recent work includes: the Milan Faculty of Biology (1978-81), Tanimoto house in Tokyo (1985) and the Famagosta Bus Depot in Milan (1989).

Milan, tower house in piazzale Aquileia 8.
Milan, tower house in piazzale Aquileia 8, 1964-1965

Image source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vico_Magistretti#/media/File:Paolo_Monti_-_Servizio_fotografico_(Milano,_1965)_-_BEIC_6328946.jpg


Info source:

https://www.theguardian.com/news/2006/oct/18/guardianobituaries.artsobituaries

https://www.stardust.com/vico-magistretti.html

https://www.cassina.com/en/designer/vico-magistretti

https://www.pamono.com/designers/vico-magistretti

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