Carlo Scarpa & Tobia Scarpa - Dialogo sospeso

Carlo Scarpa © Svegliado and his son Tobia Scarpa © Riccardo Crosetta

Since 2003, the Museum of Decorative Arts of Bordeaux organizes regularly exhibitions of design. This year, the museum presents the work of the venetian architect Tobia Scarpa and the work of his father, Carlo, who died in 1978 and with whom he was first an apprendice, then a business partner. Tobia took an active role in the organization of this exhibition which gathers, for the first time, the work of both creators.

Carlo Scarpa - Monumental Complexe Brion, 1969-1978, San Vito © Alberto Vendrame, Studio Scarpa

More than thirty years after his death, Carlo Scarpa (1906 Venice–1978 Sendai, Japan) is still considered one of Italy’s more important architects. During his long career from the 20’s until the 70’s, most of his work is settled in Venetia. His name is renown due to the restaurations of historical buidings such as the Correr museum, the Castelvecchio museum, and the Querini fondation among others.

Carlo Scarpa - Sculpture Crescita © Alberto Vendrame, Studio Scarpa

One of his last projects, left incomplete at the time of his death, was completed in 2006 by his son Tobia: the Villa Palazzetto in Monselice. Besides the mentioned projects, Scarpa’s most significant works are the Gipsoteca Canoviana at the Canova Museum in Possagno (1955-1957), the Castelvecchio museum in Verona (1954-1956), and the Fondazione Querini Stampalia, Venice (1961-1963) where his great awareness of the city’s history provides a new dimension. One of the most ambitious landscape and garden projects of his career is the Brion Sanctuary at San Vito d’Altivole in Veneto, realized between 1969 and 1978.

Tobia Scarpa - Carafe Moretta, 1990 © Tobia Scarpa

Tobia Scarpa, Carlo Scarpa’s son, has been working in architecture and design for almost 40 years. First with Afra Bianchin, then alone, he has designed objects, furniture, lamps, office buildings, houses, factories, museums, and showrooms –more than 400 realizations–. In all his work we find beautiful experiments of the potential of the materials, the change of the relationships between forms and functions, and a new understanding of the space where they reside.

The first design pieces of Tobia Scarpa dates back to 1957 at the Paolo Venini's glass factory in which his father worked during years. In 1957, he meets Afra Bianchin (Montebelluna, on 1937 - Trevignano, on 2011) at the Istituto Universitario di Architettura di Venezia. For a test at the Istituto, he designs a prototype of a wooden chair, the armchair Pigreco, an example of simplicity, that is edited first by Santabona, then by Gavina. During almost 40 years, they imagined design objects: furniture, lamps edited by big manufacturers (Knoll, Molteni, Maxalto, Flos), while leading at the same time architect's activity.

Tobia Scarpa - Pigreco, 1959, for Santabona © Giorgio Furla

In 1970, their armchair Soriana was rewarded with the Compasso d'Oro. Generally Tobia Scarpa's seats are made by elements such as construction sets. The chair Libertà from 1989 is an assembly of two parts folded and screwed. Afra Bianchin and Tobia Scarpa drew tens of lamps, most for a new brand: Flos. Thanks to the manufacturing process Cocoon, they created the lamp Fantasma, then the lamp Jucker. In 1968, they designed the table lamp, Biagio, made of Carrara marble; they also designed the floor lamp Papillona, and created a large collection of silversmith objects for San Lorenzo.


Exhibition: Carlo Scarpa & Tobia Scarpa - Dialogo sospeso
Musée des Arts Décoratifs de Bordeaux, France
From September 14 2012 to December 31 2012 

tags: furniture, sculpture, Tobia Scarpa, exhibitions, modern architecture, Carlo Scarpa
designers: Tobia Scarpa, Carlo Scarpa
1 comment send del.icio.us digg technorati
One comment so far:
Shawn's Gravatar Shawn, on August 31:

Quasar was certainly a designer that was ahead of his time when he created these inflatable furniture. Not only do they still remain relevant today, their design are quite timeless. The only problem is that since most of them require plastic to make, would they be biodegradable and are they recyclable?
Shawn

matkoline
Self Book Pub. Blog, on June 1:
"Good post. Thank's a lot for your post."

Interiorally, on May 16:
"Hope this is available on Amazon, if so it's going on my wish list. I'm fascinated by tonal variety ..."

Daphne, on May 2:
"Love it..such a stunning pieces! want to have one"

Andy Grey, on April 26:
"Mainly hardened polyvinyl carbonate type materials are used to make inflatable furniture,so that the..."

David, on April 26:
"What a beautiful creation it is. I really would love to have this master pieces in my home. How can ..."

Joe, on March 20:
"Simple yet elegant. Great design."

Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
      1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30       
accessories audio awards books ceramic competitions conference contemporary architecture electronic essays events exhibitions fabric food forum furniture glass graphic kids kitchen konstantin grcic lighting modern architecture music new products new technologies news outdoor plastic project rugs sculpture sport sustainable tableware textile timepieces toys transportation video wood workshop
Click here to subscribe to the RSS feed of this blog (what is a feed?).
Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog.


advertising