Friday, March 27, 2020

Artist of the day, March 27, 2020: Joe Colombo, an Italian industrial designer (953)

Joe Colombo, born Cesare Colombo (1930 – 1971) was an Italian industrial designer. He was educated at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera, the academy of fine arts, in Milano as a painter and studied afterward until 1954 Architecture at Politecnico di Milano University.

In 1951 he joined the Movimento Nucleare, founded by Sergio D´Angelo and Enrico Baj. The following four years Colombo was active as a painter and sculptor of Abstract Expressionism and exhibited his works with other members in Milano, Torino, Verviers, Venice, and Brussels.

In 1955 Colombo joined the Art Concret group but gave up his painting to promote his Design Career. Before he cooperated at an exhibition for the tenth Triennale of 1954 and documented the Ceramic Designs of an international meeting in Albisola. For his presentation, Colombo created, for example, three exterior seatings which were combined with a "shrinelike" presentation of TVs.

In 1959, Colombo had to take over the family company, which produced electric appliances and started to experiment with new construction and production technologies. In 1962 Colombo opened his own interior design and architecture projects, mostly for lodges and skiing.

Together with his brother Gianni, Colombo developed the idea of prismatic lamps like the lamp Acrilica (1962). His first design for Kartell was chair No.4801 (1963–1967) which consisted of three assembled plywood elements. The flowing elements of his chair were a foretaste of his later plastic designs, like the chair universale No.4860 (1965–1967), which was the first seating for adults made of ABS.

Moreover, Colombo produced innovative designs for furniture, lamps, glass, doorknobs, pipes, alarm clocks, and wristwatches. He created the professional camera Trisystem (1969), the air conditioner Candy, dinnerware for Alitalia, as well as an ergonomic and engined printing table.

Since the beginning of his career, Colombo was most interested in living systems. His early modular container Combi-Centre of 1963 is an example of that. This preference for furniture systems led to designs like Additional Living System (1967–1968) and the chairs Tube (1969–1970) and Multi (1970), which could be assembled in various positions to get a great number of sitting positions. They reflect Colombo's main goal, variability.

His futuristic designs were integrated micro-living-worlds. His Visiona-Livingroom of the future was exhibited at the Visiona-Exhibition of 1969. This room consisted of "Barbella-like" space interiors where furniture became structure elements and vice versa. Traditional furniture was replaced by functional elements like the sitting cubes Night-Cell and Central-Living as well as the Kitchen-Box, to create a dynamic, multifunctional living space. The kitchen-box (1963), on wheels and measuring 90x75x75cm, containing a two-burner stovetop, oven, grill, refrigerator, cutting board, pull-out worktop, and storage for cookbooks, knives, and other tools, has recently been reissued, slightly enlarged (96 cm(h)x107cmx65cm), manufactured by Boffi Spa.

For his own apartment, Colombo designed the units Roto-living and Cabriolet-Bed (both 1969), followed by Total Furnishing Unit, which was presented at the exhibition Italy: The Domestic Landscape at the Museum of Modern Art, New York in 1972. It presented a complete "living-machine," comprising kitchen, wardrobe, bathroom, and sleeping accommodation, on only 28 square meters.

© 2020. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Joe Colombo or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only



Mr. Joe Colombo
1948, Coupé 2202. Lamp
1962, Colombo 281. Lamp
1963, Elda. Chair
1964, The Globe 727. Lamp
1964,  The Globe 828. Lamp
1964, Asimmetrico. Drinking Glass
1965, Wall light from the Spider series
1965, Ceiling light from the Spider series
1967, Coupé 1158. Lamp
1967, Coupé 3320 R 12. Lamp
1967, Orange KD29. Table Lamp
1967, System seating. For Sormani Italy
1967, Universale Chair. For Kartell
1968, 2625 Poker table
1969, Portable storage system
1969, Portable storage system
1969, Portable storage system
1969, The Tube Chair. For Flexform
1969. Spinny Drawer Unit
1970, Living Center
1970, Topolino. Table Lamp
1971, 2296 BIRILLO. Barstool
1971, Red Armchair. Multi chair
1972, Colombo 626. Lamp
2008, Colombo 889. Lamp
2010, Poltrona 4801. Chair
Astrea. For Longhi S.p.a.

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