Posts Tagged ‘italian design’

bitossi italian pottery

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

bitossi_group

In 1921 Guido Bitossi founded the ceramics company Manifattura Cav. Guido Bitossi & Figli in Montelupo, Italy.  Aldo Londi became the creative director after WWII, and was the guiding force until the 1980s. Londi designed thousands of forms in addition to the patterns and techniques that were applied to them.  His 1950s Rimini Blu collection is the most recognized with its striking layers of blue and turquoise glazes, and many of the pieces are still in production today.  Bitossi was distributed in the U.S. by Raymor, one of the most influential importers of modern decorative arts in the mid 20th Century.

Architect Ettore Sottsass designed lines for Bitossi from 1950 through the 1990s.  Other notable designers include Marco Zanini, George Sowden, Piero Fornasetti, Karim Rashid, and Arik Levy.  Bitossi continues to combine traditional and new techniques with an attention to hand-finishing along with their signature use of enamels and mix of colors.  Today Bitossi operates as Ceramica Bistossi under the business name Flavia.

Sadly most vintage pieces are marked with only a hand-inscribed style number and Italy.  On pieces imported by Raymor, the letters BIT are sometimes on the paper label.  Newer ceramics have Bitossi and Made in Italy printed in ink. – Terri

random lighting

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

light_med

Above is a photo of a late 1950s Italian pendant light that hangs above our dining table.  It came from a home that had a dazzling array of high-end modern, including a 3-color Triennale floor lamp designed in the 50s by Gino Sarfatti for Arredoluce, Italy.  (We sold that lamp and kept this one.  C’est la vie.)

I was struck by the resemblance between our vintage example and the Random Light (below) designed by Bertjan Pot for the Dutch firm Moooi (which means beauty in Danish).  Both are constructed in a similar way using epoxy-dipped fiberglass yarn.  The main difference is that the Random Light is coiled around an inflatable orb.  The Italian versions were formed around balls of mouth-blown glass which were broken once the yarn had set.  I like the fact that it has an inner white glass cylinder as opposed to an exposed bulb.

random_setting

Another example of what goes around comes around.  Or to quote Ecclesiastes, “There is no new thing under the sun.”  – Terri