This is Friuli, lying on the outer boundaries
of that politically notorious territory
known in Italy as the Northeast,
not to mention also possibly the last
bastion of small and medium Italian
manufacturing companies. For decades
this precious but worn-down area
has been a melting pot of industrious
human resources, where the production
of furniture has always been limited
to a few types only, mostly chairs
of a conventional style.
One of the most significant companies
in the recent history of Italian design
took shape and evolved here during
the epochal turning point of the '80s:
Moroso. The firm has many characteristics
in common with the most hallowed
and classic Italian business models
of the design sector: the use of a
workshop for handcrafted parts and
finishes, family-run, local roots, a pioneering
spirit, a passion for research,
focus on quality, and experience in
large custom-made projects. In Moroso's
evolution there are also new elements
that have been affixed to the
DNA of the "Italian way" of making design,
and they reflect changes that
came about in the '80s: a modernised
approach to management and communications;
an international and global
vision of the culture of home living
(not only aesthetically, but also in terms
of distribution, turning their location
– peripheral compared to the suffocating
centrality of the Milan-Brianza district
– into an advantage); the investment
in technological innovations of
the production process; uninhibited
curiosity for new types of decorative
and artistic (usually connected)
projects; and the pursuit of new visual
languages and the latest fashions which
are increasingly light and fleeting.
This hybridisation and cross-pollination
between values originating in a
meaningful past combined with contemporary
experiences (many of
which are also loaded with values) has
definitely borne good fruit. Maybe not
all were equally appealing, but as long
as the disappointments are few and far
between, as is the case with Moroso, we
can consider them the inevitable price
to pay for a trial-and-error approach.
The reviewing of a manufacturing
company calls for a historical evaluation of its growth phases and the evolution
of its vision as applied to the uses
and shapes of the things humans need
at that point in time: for daily life, home
living, communicating, personal expression
and, of course, for producing
and selling. These accounts and visions
are found in the work of entrepreneurs,
designers and production managers,
and they become concrete in the
produced pieces. They need to be read
carefully in order to recognise the distinctive
qualities that constitute the
spirit of that particular and original
outlook on the world.
But the aim here is not to analyse the
last 30 years of Moroso's output. It is
enough to focus on the state of the art,
in this case represented by the firm's
production from 2008 to 2010. Formulating
a comprehensive overview is no
easy task. It arguably has the typical
composition of a post-modern novel,
a hypertext that mixes classic with exotic,
poetic with kitschy, minimal with
romantic and decorative. Of course,
the idea of having a product range
made up of collections of objects designed
by different designers who express
a highly diversified creative approach
is not new. It is an invention of
Italian design manufacturers, and goes
all the way back to Cassina with Ponti,
Magistretti, Bellini and Pesce. Back
then, however, such designers interpreted
a world that was in the process
of being shaped. They made their evocative
representation of it, which, although
it changed over time, remained
recognisable – more for the way they
formulated it than for its style.
Maybe today's excessively fast-moving
times, much like the speed dictated by
the fashion world, are what bestow an
almost stroboscopic appearance to the
dizzying succession of vast yearly collections.
Luckily, the single products
can be read separately, making interpretation
more orderly and specific.
The house designer at Moroso is Patricia
Urquiola, who began her very successful
career right here. Indeed, her
work covers 50 per cent of the company's
entire range from the past years.
Although she is not lacking in talent or
experience, the undoubted ability to
take on every single type of project
sometimes results in an emotionless
academic exercise that is a far cry from
her more in-depth and innovative
work. The evolution of the attractive
Antibodi structure for the Tropicalia
Collection is a convincing example,
while her upholstered furniture (the
models Bohemian, Field, Fergana,
Spring or Rift), although highly dignified,
should have looked more carefully
at Achille Castiglioni's Hilly sofas
for Cassina. Naturally, we fully appreciate
that in order to keep afloat nowadays,
companies need to include products
with easy appeal for the mass market.
In this sense, hats off to Urquiola,
who takes care of this important task.
Inevitably, even the sharpest pencil becomes
blunt, or worse, settles into the
rut of stylistic complacency.
Something analogue happened with
Ron Arad, who, after the triumphant
Misfits series of upholstered seating,
and the fascinating Wavy chair (2007),
tried his hand at the orthogonal-geometric-
pixellated approach with Do-
Lo-Rez. In doing so, he seemed to get
lost in a typically 1970s' compositional
exercise, without injecting the project
with the necessary punch. More balanced,
yet somehow dangling in midair,
is the obvious collaboration with
Tokujin Yoshioka, who designed the
handsome Panna Chair, but also the
perhaps less accomplished Paper
Cloud and Bouquet, which are ethereal
in a fussy way.
Nevertheless, Moroso's unfailing forte
over the years remains its willingness
to open up research and product development
to young, unknown designers
who speak new visual languages,
even if this has not always resulted in
new contents for home living. Undoubtedly
captivating, especially for
their use of material, are the pieces designed
by the Indo-Scottish couple Nipa
Doshi and Jonathan Levien: My
Beautiful Backside (sofas), Paper
Planes (chairs) and Principessa (a daybed).
Tord Boontje sourced an interesting
African technique for his lively
Shadowy chairs: hand-woven plastic
cording, traditionally used for fishing
nets. It is also used by the designer-duo
Bibi Seck and Ayse Birsel from New
York for their exotic Madame Dakar
outdoor armchair-cum-hammock
feel, which looks like an homage to the
Africa-inspired furniture (1923) by
Pierre Legrain. Madame Dakar is part
of Moroso's extensive M'Afrique Collection,
which includes rationalist
armchairs and rocking chairs that represent
a graceful version of chaises
longues designed in the 1930s by Jean
Burkhalter and Erich Dieckmann.
We appreciate the poetic elegance in
Boontje's redesign of the chairs and
tables belonging to the Rain Collection,
based on the lacquered steel version
found in French parks, and the
metaphysical/surreal Black Stone tables
by Luca Nichetto, from Venice,
who uses floral photographs by his
friend Massimo Gardone to print the
tops. The relationship between shape
and technology is exalted in the Tennis
chair by young Polish designer
Tomek Rygalik, the Nanook chair by
Swiss designer Philippe Bestenheider,
and the Twist Again stool by Karmelina
Martina from Sarajevo.
A final small note of merit goes out to
the Diesel Collection (excluding the
cabinets), which officially does not carry
the name of its designer. So we imagine
that it is designed, like used to
happen in the old days, by the "product
development department". Knowing
them, they possess enough understanding
and expertise of good design
to make things work.
Block Notes #2: Moroso
For the review of the production activity of Moroso we have chosento look at the company's output of the last three years.
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- Giampiero Bosoni
- 24 October 2010
- Cavalicco