Design File 005: Luigi Caccia Dominioni

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In this series, Matthew Sullivan (AQQ Design) highlights some designers that you should know, but might not. Previously, he looked at the work of Ugo La Pietra.

Luigi Caccia Dominioni: Born in Milan, Italy, 1913

The beauty of form is either a digression or a clarification. In the latter case—clarification—time or collective use is the shaper of form, as in the way a spoon or any quotidian object is morphed by broad utility through generations. The former case, the digressive, is when an individual journeys into an exclusive focus on the shape of a particular thing; this is the singular task of designers, generally speaking. This is true for the deceptive simplicity of Dieter Rams as well as the material arabesques of Ettore Sottsass. To be clear, contrary to popular opinion, a designer doesn’t clarify, she/he explores. An individual can’t possibly control the unforeseen and logistical, like the cosmic economy of collectivity, so it is giving shape to the mystery of memory and preference that really informs a designer’s quarry.

In light of the above lines, the work of Luigi Caccia Dominioni is an impeccable example of what a single designer can achieve. His 70-plus years of work have yielded buildings and objects of a deep sensitivity.

DesignFile-LuigiDominioni-2.jpgAbove: Dominioni’s 1953 Monachella floor lamp for Azucena. Top image: the Ambrosianeum Chair from 1955 (left) and the Luis Chair from 2003

Dominioni is an architect and a designer. At university he studied under Luigi Moretti (a first-wave Italian modernist), which seems to have been a fairly influential tutelage, as Dominioni’s architectural work has consistently been in close dialogue with this first phase of modernism. His professional life started successfully, designing objects and interiors with the Castiglioni brothers (Achille, Livio and Pier Giacomo). He is often quoted as saying that a good building is designed from the inside out, and this idea was surely the catalyst for Dominioni’s 1947 opening of Azucena, a design firm focusing on furniture and objects. From then on, Dominioni was a cornerstone of the post-war generation of Italian architects, alongside Franco Albini, Ico Parisi, Ignacio Gardella, Osvaldo Borsani, Angelo Mangiarotti and Carlo Mollino.

When looking at Dominioni’s designs, it is important to keep in mind that European homes, unlike those in the U.S., are often older, having ornamental notes in the keys of different eras (at times classical, sometimes even ancient). And, even if a particular building is totally new, the street on which it rests typically presents an array of historical perspectives. American designers working in parallel with Dominioni (George Nelson, Charles Eames, etc.) were less confined and were often designing toward unbuilt, forward-looking vistas. The shapes of much midcentury modernist Italian furniture, due to said architectural constraints, have a modern feel, but with accents more inclusive of a multitude of situations; whereas much American furniture can feel of the time. Dominioni’s Monachella floor lamp (1953), Ambrosianeum chair (1955), Boccia sconce (1967) and Pipistrello desk (1998) speak to this versatility amazingly well.

DesignFile-LuigiDominioni-3.jpgThe Pipistrello desk for Azucena (1998)

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Young Hearted Apparel: The Atlanta brand launches with playfully designed socks, inspired by ’90s pop culture and made in America

Young Hearted Apparel


Even with the influx of new men’s basics brands in recent years, there still seems to be a gap in the market for fledging adults not quite ready to settle into life in solid stripes or basic patterns. In an effort to deliver…

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Disappearing Light Object

Roberto Paoli’s award-winning Tru lamp explores the interplay between what is visible and what is not, using critical geometries and material so inconsequential that it’s almost invisible when turned off. Positioned discretely in its environment (resting on less than one square decimeter), the force of its LED light is surprisingly powerful. It’s this contrast that gives the illusion of intense luminosity sprung from structural void.

Designer: Roberto Paoli


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(Disappearing Light Object was originally posted on Yanko Design)

Related posts:

  1. The Case of the Disappearing Home Interior
  2. Shintory – Disappearing Ice Bowl by Daniel Hunziker
  3. Time, the Immovable Object


    



Children who Love Animals

Depuis leur naissance, les jeunes Yaroslav et Vanya ont développé un lien avec les animaux, qui ne cesse de se renforcer à mesure qu’ils vieillissent. Fascinée par cette relation privilégiée, leur maman Elena Shumilova a décidé de capturer quelques-uns de ces moments de tendresse. Suivez leurs aventures dans la suite.

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Studio Visit: Aliki Kirmitsi: The London-based set designer on her process, inspiration and letting ideas have lives of their own

 Studio Visit: Aliki Kirmitsi


There is a tangibly refined and almost childlike simplicity about Cyprus-born, London-based set designer Aliki Kirmitsi’s images. Her goal—when approaching any project—is to, “create a space that is balanced and carries an element of surprise, weaving…

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Seven organizing strategies for a home renovation project

Organizing a home renovation is no easy task. Coordinating with contractors, applying for building permits, and keeping track of all of the bills, invoices, and receipts can be quite time consuming. The following seven tips are things to consider prior to starting a renovation project so it runs more smoothly.

Unclutter. Keep only items used on a daily basis in the space you are renovating. For example, during a summer time kitchen renovation, pack away Christmas dishes and place them in storage. If the renovation is scheduled for your bedroom, place off-season and seldom worn clothing in another area of the house.

Security. There will be times when your home will not be secure, such as when workers are transporting materials in and out or if windows are being replaced. Consider placing valuable jewelry and vital documents (birth certificates, social security cards, etc.) in a safety deposit box for the duration of the renovation. Other sensitive documents, such as receipts and bank statements should be stored in a locked filing cabinet. Sentimental items such as photos, souvenirs, and memorabilia should also be packed away so they will not be damaged.

Safety. Remember that a renovation is a construction site. There may be electrical wires exposed and places where you can slip, trip, or fall. Discuss the risks with the contractor and consider installing barrier gates to keep children and pets out of the area. Small pets such as guinea pigs and rabbits can get into holes and get sealed in. Cats may get curious and get stuck in places they shouldn’t. Dogs may get slivers in their paws from walking through broken bits of wood. Consider having your four-legged friends stay with family, friends, or pet daycare if you cannot be home to supervise them during the renovation process.

Review routines. Before the renovations begin, examine all of the ways the project will interrupt your regular routines. For example, if you have to shower in the guest bathroom in the mornings, will you be able to walk through the house in your bathrobe? You may need to plan extra time the night before to bring your clothes to the guest bathroom. If you will be using another entryway for access into the house, you may need to move the car keys, cell phone charger, and children’s backpacks. Ensure you have a place for incoming mail so that bills still get paid and important documents get filed. If you can’t get to your filing cabinet, invest in a small accordion-filing folder to use during the renovation process.

Create swing space. If furniture must be removed from certain rooms during the renovation process, it should be placed in a way that doesn’t interfere with household operations. You just can’t cook a decent meal with a sectional sofa in the middle of the kitchen. You may wish to clear your garage or basement or consider putting some furniture temporarily into storage during the renovation.

Plan for the unplanned. You should have a back up plan in case of emergencies, such as a busted water pipe or heating/air-conditioning system shutdown. Have a list of local hotels handy in case you need to make a last-minute reservation. It is also helpful to have a list of local restaurants that offer take-out and delivery for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Keep a stash of coins and a large mesh bag in your car in case you need to use the local Laundromat.

Think positive. As my mother is fond of saying, “This too shall pass.” Renovations are a temporary state. Once completed, you’ll be able to enjoy your new space, and look back and smile at your renovation adventure.

Let Unclutterer help you get your home or office organized. Subscribe to our helpful product shipments from Quarterly today.

Taking Stock of Technology: Two Experiments on Device Devotion

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“This One Weird Trick” and “[Number] [Superlative] You Must See!” notwithstanding, “Technology Is Making Us [negative attribute]er” is among those sign-of-the-times headlines that reliably attracts fingertips and the eyeballs connected to them, and it remains an ever-relevant (and at times evergreen) topic du siècle. (Here’s where I recommend Luke O’Neil’s recent polemic on this disturbing trend in clickbaiting before diving right in.) Even as the pendulum—more a katamari than a wrecking ball—continues to swing between the poles of pro- and anti-technology, so too have new developments in mobile, the Internet of Things and overarching privacy concerns added a proverbial Z-axis to the playing field.

Professor Keith Hampton of Rutgers is, by the New York Times’ account, “neither a reactionary about technology, innately skeptical of the new, nor a utopian, eager to trumpet every invention as revolutionary. He is instead a sanguine optimist—a position he says is backed up by his research.” Along with a cadre of grad students, he’s spent the past several years working on what might be described as a shot-for-shot remake of an urban investigation from nearly half a century prior. Hampton is revisiting William Whyte’s seminal Street Life Project, in which he filmed public spaces in a first-of-its-kind study of urban planning by observing user behavior.

Thus, he’s taking up the cause—gathering empirical data in the interest of a more human-centric approach to urbanism—with a specific focus on mobile technology. As its title suggests, the Magazine feature—a worthwhile read for design researchers and city-dwellers alike—presents Hampton’s finding that “Technology Is Not Driving Us Apart After All.”

Fellow armchair sociologists who are pressed for time at the moment—I, too, have feeds to scroll through and e-mails to delete—might be interested in a brief post by Columbia’s Tim Wu, his first contribution to the New Yorker‘s tech blog. He proposes, in so many words, a kind of Turing test for a time traveller as a means of determining whether technology is making us smarter or dumber. He concludes that “how you answer the question of whether we are getting smarter depends on how you classify ‘we'”—whether you regard technology as an extension of the mind or as an external factor of purely incidental import.

Yet the most fascinating thing that Hampton found (spoiler alert, sort of) is the fact that more women are out and about in these spaces in New York, Boston and Philadelphia. “Who would’ve thought that, in America, 30 years ago, women were not in public the same way they are now? We don’t think about that.”

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Star Wars Toys Look Like Real

Dans la lignée du projet When Lego meets Star Wars, voici le reste de la série de l’illustrateur Vesa Lehtimäki mettant en scène les jouets et vaisseaux Star Wars de son enfant au fil des années et dans la vie réelle. Un rendu très réaliste avec « Star Wars Toys Look Like Real » à découvrir en détails dans la suite.

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Wellcome Images releases 100,000 pictures online

Horoscope of Prince Iskandar (grandson of Timur who ruled the province of Farsin, Iran) showing the positions of the heavens at the moment of his birth on 25th April 1384. Wellcome Library, London

The Wellcome Library, one of the world’s leading collections of medical history, has announced that over 100,000 pictures from its archives are now freely available from its Images pages online…

In a move similar to the British Library’s recent announcement that it had uploaded over a million images to Flickr, the Wellcome Library has now also decided that a large selection of its images – dedicated to the history of health and medicine – should be made free for use under the Creative Commons Attribution licence.

Illustration of an ‘exploded thorax’ (1823) by Paulo Mascagni, Prosector of Anatomy at the University of Siena. Wellcome Library, London

This means that the images downloaded from wellcomeimages.org can be used for personal or commercial use, providing an acknowledgement to the original source is given.

Images in the digitised collection range from scans of paintings, illustrations and manuscripts to early examples of photography. As one would expect with a medical archive, the oldest examples from which go back two thousand years, there are many weird and wonderful pictures to explore, from a Paolo Mascagni’s coloured etching of an ‘exploded’ torso (above), to a sketch of a female genital tattoo.

Photogravure by Eadweard Muybridge of a man standing on his hands (1887). Wellcome Library, London

“Together the collection amounts to a dizzying visual record of centuries of human culture, and our attempts to understand our bodies, minds and health through art and observation,” says Simon Chaplin, head of the Wellcome Library. “As a strong supporter of open access, we want to make sure these images can be used and enjoyed by anyone without restriction.”

A classic dentist’s trick: ‘A surgeon holding a dental key behind his back to conceal it from the patient’ by Luciano Nezzo (born 1856). Wellcome Library, London

The Wellcome Images website is at wellcomeimages.org.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white belfry

A rectilinear belfry towers above the geometric white volume of this church congregation hall in Hungary by local firm SAGRA Architects (+ slideshow).

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

The Szolnok Reformed Church Congregation House is the first of two buildings by SAGRA Architects to be completed on the site in Szolnok, central Hungary, following a competition to design a new church complex.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

The single-storey building contains a hall capable of accommodating around 30-40 people, an office and kitchen facilities, providing spaces that can be used for either worship or other community activities.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

A wall extends out from the eastern side of the building, connecting the structure with the bell tower and creating a secluded terrace in front of the glazed southern facade.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

This facade is also slightly recessed to allow part of the gabled roof to function as a canopy across the entrance.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

“The basis of our concept was to create an open, clear and transparent space that still represents protection,” explained architect Gábor Sajtos.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

Exterior walls are rendered white, while the roof is clad with black slate tiles and windows are framed by stained wood.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

“The materials used reflect the spirituality of the building,” said Sajitos. “The white plastered walls and black slate roof suit its austerity and noble simplicity.”

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

Construction on the neighbouring church has not yet begun, due to problems securing funding. Once complete, it will be positioned on the northern boundary of the site, while remaining spaces between the two buildings will feature flower gardens.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

Read on for more information from Sagra Architects:


Congregation House – SAGRA Architects

“… but love builds people up” – 1 Corinthians 8

The design process was preceded by an architectural competition. The SAGRA Architects’ design was rewarded as the winning proposal.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

The congregation house is multifunctional: besides operating as congregation hall it houses catechism classes and programmes, fulfils social duties and charity tasks. As the building is also an eco-point, its programmes play part in spreading ecological thinking and teaching sustainable behaviour.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

The basis of our concept during the design of Szolnok Reformed Church Congregation House was to create an open, clear and transparent space that still represents protection. Due to its architecture the building serves as a suitable place for worship and community occasions.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

The building complex has two parts: the single-storey, cantilevered volume of the congregation house with gabled roof and the Bell tower. The bell tower is an organic part of the complex. The wooden terrace, inserted between the congregation house and the tower extends and opens up the internal community space through a fully openable glass wall. The cantilevered roof creates a transition zone between inside and outside. The south facade is shaded by the strongly cantilevered roof in summer, while it lets in the sharp angled sunbeams in winter.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

The composition of the buildings is completed by the lavender garden, the floral garden and the lawn garden with seating and water surface.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

The main access to the building is from south, from the street. Here the visitor is led through a pulled back, transition entrance area. The bell tower’s volume leads into the site. The walls, built on the southern and western site boundaries are the integral parts of the complex, symbols of protection, but open up and lead in at the same time. Placing the buildings on the site boundaries is also part of the local building regulations. Through these walls open up, the site becomes private but still open for passing through from all directions.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower

The congregation hall is extendable towards the wooden terrace. The terrace becomes the full, open-air part of the hall in summer.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower
Competition-winning proposal for church complex

The materials used reflect the spirituality of the building. The white plastered walls and black slate roof suit to its austerity and noble simplicity. The doors, windows and the south facade of the building are covered with stained wood, as well as the underside of the cantilevered roof.

Szolnok Reformed Church Congregation House by Sagra Architects_dezeen_2
Proposed overview plan – click for larger image

As the building is also an eco-point, its programmes play part in spreading ecological thinking and teaching sustainable behaviour, so we considered this aspect during the design process.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower
Proposed site plan – click for larger image

The heating and hot water supply of this low energy, economical building is solved by an air to water heat pump. The heating is radiating surface heating (heated floor and ceiling), the cooling is provided by radiating surface cooling from the ceiling. The temperature of the spaces is controlled by thermostatic valves.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower
Section – click for larger image

The south facade is shaded by the strongly cantilevered roof in summer, while it lets in the sharp angled sunbeams in winter.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower
South – click for larger image

Future

The church complex contains three main masses: the church, the congregation house with pastor’s office and the bell tower. The three volumes form an inseparable unity.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower
East elevation – click for larger image

Until now the congregation house and the bell tower were built. The congregation is aiming to construct the church too in the future, but the financial background for it is still missing.

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower
North elevation – click for larger image

Architects: Sagra Architects
Architect in Charge: Sajtos Gábor
Design team: Sajtos Gábor, Grand Gabriella, Páll András, Virág Péter, Németh Regina
Year: 2012
Location: Szolnok, Hungary
Photographs: Szentirmai Tamás

Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects features a towering white bell tower
West elevation – click for larger image

The post Church congregation hall by SAGRA Architects
features a towering white belfry
appeared first on Dezeen.