Joe Colombo: inventing the future
Many immediately associate Italy with its Roman, Etruscan past … Yet the Italians have quite a history in future-related stuff as well. Think of the utopian city designs of Paolo Soleri, Marinetti’s futurist movement … or Joe Colombo? The famous Italian designer who died way to young at age 41 designed everything from lighting, to seats, to underground cities, James Bond like environments where screens fold out of the ceiling, climate controlled sleeping cells, pivoting walls etc. Vitra’s exhibition on Joe Colombo’s life and achievements (curated together with the Triennale di Milano and Studio Joe Colombo) has been on tour for almost two years now and is currently on show at the Museum for Decorative Arts in Paris, France.
For those of you still planning their summer city trip or European tour, pay it a visit while you still can.
“The possibilities presented by the extraordinary development of audiovisual processes are enormous … Distances will no longer have much importance; no longer will there be any justification for the ‘megalopolis’ … Furnishings will disappear … the habitat will be everywhere … Now, if the elements necessary to human existence could be planned with the sole requirements of maneuverability and flexibility … , then we would create an inhabitable system that could be adapted to any situation in space and time …”
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July 25th, 2007 at 10:58
[...] Link to Article un studio Joe Colombo: inventing the future » Posted at a thousand tomorrows on Wednesday, July 25, 2007 [ Joe Colombo] Many immediately associate Italy with its Roman, … (curated together with the Triennale di Milano and Studio Joe Colombo) has been on tour for almost two View Entire Article » [...]