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Entryways of Milan. Ingressi di Milano (English, Italian, Hardcover, Bilingual edition)
Fabrizio Ballabio, Daniel Sherer, Lisa Hockemeyer, Penny Sparke, Grazia Signori, …
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R1,687
R1,399
Discovery Miles 13 990
Save R288 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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First impressions count, especially in Milano. In this
unprecedented photographic journey, editor Karl Kolbitz opens the
door to 144 of the city's most sumptuous entrance halls,
captivating in their diversity and splendor. These vibrant Milanese
entryways, until now hidden away behind often restrained facades,
are revealed as dazzling examples of Italian modernism, mediating
public and private space with vivid configurations of color and
form, from floors of juxtaposed stones to murals of minimalist
geometry. The collection spans buildings from 1920 to 1970 and
showcases the work of some of the city's most illustrious
architects and designers, including Giovanni Muzio, Gio Ponti,
Piero Portaluppi, and Luigi Caccia Dominioni, as well as
non-pedigreed architecture of equal impact and interest. The
photographs for the publication were exclusively created by Delfino
Sisto Legnani, Paola Pansini, and Matthew Billings, each evoking
the entryways with individual sensibility and a stylistic interplay
of detail shots-such as stones, door handles, and handrails-with
larger architectural views. The images are accompanied by
outstanding written contributions from Penny Sparke, Fabrizio
Ballabio, Lisa Hockemeyer, Daniel Sherer, Brian Kish, and Grazia
Signori, together bringing a wealth of architecture, design, and
natural stone expertise to guide the reader through the applied
materials and fittings as well as the art-historical and social
implications of each of the ingressi. As much an architectural city
guide as an aesthetic study, the book provides the exact address
and an annotated Milan map for all featured entryways, as well as
the architect name and date of construction. In the well-documented
realm of 20th-century Italian design, Kolbitz has stepped over the
threshold and delivered a brand new area of inquiry in Milanese
modernism. With the rigor of its multifaceted research, poised
photography, and breadth of its featured hallways, this is an
invigorating new reference work and an inside look at the city's
design DNA across high to low architecture.
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Gio Ponti (Hardcover)
Salvatore Licitra, Stefano Casciani, Lisa Licitra Ponti, Brian Kish, Fabio Marino; Edited by …
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R7,041
R5,304
Discovery Miles 53 040
Save R1,737 (25%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Also available as Art Edition (No. 1-1,000) including an exclusive,
square format reproduction of the Arlecchino coffee table and a set
of four numbered ocean liner interior prints. To study Gio Ponti's
prolific body of work is to appreciate the clear, unifying vision
behind a complex creative universe. A synthesis of the arts, his
creations expand intuitively with the Italian grandeur and studied
lightness that defined his iconic style. Ponti's rare capacity to
move seamlessly between scales allowed him to approach the design
of a teaspoon with the same conviction as he did an entire city. He
was as much an architect and designer as he was a publisher, poet,
and man. A treasure in its own regard, his contribution is also a
distinctive landmark of Italy's mid-century Renaissance and the
modernist values it sought to realize. This new book is the most
comprehensive account of Ponti's work to date, unprecedented in
scale and scope. It tracks the development of his oeuvre over 6
decades, with 136 projects indexed and reproduced in high
resolution, each object framed by the context in which Ponti had
created it. Like windows onto his elusive life, unpublished
materials and candid imagery create new dialogues between his
famous masterpieces and his lesser-known feats. A rich layer of
texts, featuring an extensive biographical essay by Stefano
Casciani, was produced in close collaboration with the Gio Ponti
Archives offering an intimate insight on his life's work.
Materializing Ponti's core philosophy of modernity, this book
presents architecture as a performing object, a "self-illuminating"
stage for his humanistic art de vivre and boundless creativity.
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