True colours
Even though they might deny it, gatekeepers of design often have a narrow vision of what makes something good. Sleek form, minimalism and safe colour schemes are common – but things that Gaetano Pesce clearly thought were a load of old tosh. Yesterday it was announced that the vibrant 84-year-old artist, architect and designer had died in New York, a city that he had called home for more than 40 years. His strong, contrarian voice, which railed against minimalism and uniformity, will be sorely missed.
Born in La Spezia, Liguria, in 1939, Pesce was a pioneer of the radical Italian avant garde movement that flared up in the late 1960s and early 1970s. It threw the conventional design rule book out the window with its edgy shapes and shades. His work, such as the curvaceous Up chair series produced with B&B Italia, was always provocative, bursting with form and colour. He was also behind several architectural projects, including the red-steel Organic Building, an early pioneer of vertical gardens, which was constructed in Osaka in 1989.
He had recently collaborated with fashion brand Bottega Veneta and was due to be honoured at this year’s Salone del Mobile. He had also been continuing his long-time partnership with Meritalia, for whom he previously designed the multicolour, modular La Michetta sofa and the padded, crumpled polyurethane armchair, Shadow.
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Pesce is a reminder of what design can and should be: whimsical, experimental and boundary-pushing. You had the sense that he was constantly poking fun at everyone, himself included. “We have undoubtedly lost the most radical of radicals with Pesce,” said Meritalia CEO Charley Vezza. “A man who turned inconsistency into his consistency; a genius who will be remembered not only for his fluid forms but also for his edgy personality that made him truly unique.”
Ed Stocker is Monocle’s Europe editor at large. Gaetano Pesce’s ‘Nice to See You’ exhibition will take place at Milan Design Week from 15 to 23 April and his designs for Meritalia will be on show at Salone del Mobile’s Rho trade hall from 16 to 21 April. For more opinion, analysis and insight, subscribe to Monocle today.