An "Other" Space Within the Domestic Space

An "Other" Space Within the Domestic Space

Written by Paolo Campiglio, Specialist on the work of Lucio Fontana and Contemporary Art Researcher at the University of Pavia.

Written by Paolo Campiglio, Specialist on the work of Lucio Fontana and Contemporary Art Researcher at the University of Pavia.

Lucio Fontana and Osvaldo Borsani, Study with wall-mounted shelving system, model no. E22 and integrated Concetto spaziale, swivel armchair, model no. P32 and side chair, model no. S81, circa 1959. Design online. 

 

 

The collaboration between Lucio Fontana and Osvaldo Borsani began in the immediate post war period, born out of a mutual sympathy between them and a willingness from the architect to involve artists in his interior and furniture design projects. While other avant-garde artists of the 1950s demonstrated a humble flexibility regarding the architect's requests, Fontana affirmed his authorship in his collaborations with the designer, while respecting his ideas. Involving Fontana in an interior design or ceiling decoration commission meant creating an "apartment-appropriate Fontana," a work that would galvanize attention and often impact the surrounding environment. This is exemplified in the ceiling designs which provided indirect illumination with neon lighting and abstract plaster shapes (Casa Borsani, Casa Cavallini, Casa Maffioli). These projects were translations of Fontana’s ideas of the Ambiente spaziale or its most typical iteration, the Concetto spaziale, into forms suited to domestic spaces. These were the outcomes of his purest research, referencing an "other" spatiality.

Lucio FontanaConcetto spaziale, 1959. Design online.

The artist's hope, as he revealed to his friend and collaborator Fausta Squatriti in the 1960s, was that in the future, "every family could have a Concetto spaziale in their home, like they own a household appliance or a functional and everyday piece of furniture." The present artwork, integrated into Borsani's E22 shelving unit commissioned by a private Milanese client, aptly responds to Fontana’s intended dissemination of his ideas in home environments. It also embodies the requirement to feature the cosmic and metaphorical infinity even within the small dimensions of a piece of furniture. This Concetto spaziale (1959), marked with "graffiti" and holes on paper mounted on canvas, is vertically integrated in the shelving unit and may also be read horizontally. It is part of a series of "graffiti" on paper conceived by the artist in 1958, at a time of transition towards his more peremptory and definitive formula of the taglio (which later became an emblem of his research). Fontana scratched the paper's surface with incisive marks and punctured it with clearer incisions that appear to be preludes to the tagli. He was searching for a new sign and a formula that would renew the "space-time" definition.

 

The gestural and violent work reveals an intentional, expressive zeroing (a paper without drawing) as well as the artist’s inner struggle, his dissatisfaction with the surface as a limit, and his not yet fully fleshed out desire to cancel any superfluous gesture. He soon after discovered the decisive formula of the taglio on a monochrome surface as an affirmation of the infinite, according to a more contemplative and almost "Zen" conception. Osvaldo Borsani was fascinated by the new direction of his friend Lucio Fontana’s research and encouraged him in 1959 to imagine a "slit ceiling" for the Melandri apartment in Corso di Porta Vittoria in Milan, persevering their exceptional collaboration.

Bar cabinet with integrated Concetto spaziale. Design online.

 


 

Lucio Fontana & Osvaldo Borsani: A Synthesis of Art & Technology

 

The E22 modular shelving system was designed in 1957. It is primarily made from Brazilian rosewood and mounted on anodised aluminium brackets, allowing the shelves to be organised according to individual needs. It was conceived as a ‘living’ piece of furniture that could evolve in both form and function, along with the development of the homes it was in. Within it are two lockable cabinets with brass details and hinges incised with the iconic Tecno logo. Gloriously displayed in the integrated bar cabinet is a signed Concetto spaziale from 1959 by avant-garde artist Lucio Fontana, with whom Borsani had a prolific creative partnership. In the thriving economic and cultural climate of 1950s Italy, Borsani had begun introducing the juxtaposition of unique, expressive works of art with the clean and rigorous lines of his pioneering functional furnishings. This pairing conferred a singular and priceless form of added value to the bespoke interiors of his clients' homes.

Wall-mounted shelving system with bar cabinet and integrated Concetto spaziale, additional cabinet, adjustable desk and armchair, circa 1959. Design online.

The high-tech P32 armchair with foam padding is upholstered in fabric with a modern zip fastening. It also features the black Tecno logo on brass on bolts at either side. The model was designed in 1956 and considered a pioneering feat of engineering, displaying an innovative combination of seat movements including swivelling and returning automatically to its original position. These characteristics made it ideal for lounging and conversing in offices or homes. The armchair, whose appeal remains timeless, was not only featured in important Italian offices such as the Eni building in San Donato Milanese and leisure establishments like the Hotel del Golfo in Procchio, Elba; they were also were also front and center of their designer’s own living room. Casa Osvaldo Borsani was on the second floor of a townhouse of on Milan’s via Montenapoleone that also housed the Tecno showroom at street level.

 

The living area in Osvaldo Borsani's apartment on Via Montenapoleone, Milan showing the present P32 model armchair and model E22 shelving system. 

The S81 side chair was designed with architect Eugenio Gerli for Tecno in 1962. The seat and back are supported by a rosewood and die-cast aluminium frame. The underside of the chair is also marked with a red Tecno logo. At the core of Tecno products was a deep understanding of the role that furniture played in Italian domestic and professional environments which Borsani had gained during his formative years designing for his father's company, Arredamenti Borsani Varedo. This matured expertise, together with a desire to embrace the opportunities offered by the technologies of modern industrial production methods, underpinned Tecno's success. The company's first ever catalogue of "elegant, rational and modular" furniture clearly stated what Borsani saw as the advantages of standardized manufacturing. Designs could be perfectly and durably executed for a greater number of people in the same high quality. The components of the present lot were conceived with a prescient awareness still valid today: that the layout of homes might change to accommodate new styles, and its furnishings ought to adapt to that possibility. 

Wall-mounted desk with side chair. Design online.

 

 

 

 

Discover More from Design Online >

 


Recommended Reading

The Prompt: Teapot by Bonnie Seeman >

Meet the Giacometti Family >