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A sensorial technology / [presented by] Ettore Sottsass.

Pidgeon Digital Available online

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Format:
Sound recording
Contributor:
Sottsass, Ettore, 1917-2007, narrator.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Architecture--Aesthetics.
Architecture.
Architecture, Modern--20th century.
Architecture, Modern.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (1 audio file (29 minutes)).
Place of Publication:
London, England: Pidgeon Digital, 1984.
Summary:
The late Ettore Sottsass, who died in December 2007, was, he says, though Italian, conditioned culturally and visually by the work of the great architects of Vienna like Wagner and Hoffmann. He was destined by his architect father to follow in his footsteps, and he trained in Turin. But World War II intervened, and when he returned to Italy, times were hard and he was too restless to start a practice. However, from 1959 he headed Olivetti's electronics division, where he was responsible for the design of a continuous flow of elegant electronic machines - computers, typewriters, tele-printers, and so on. At the same time he was designing for other companies - furniture, small objects, ceramics - pursuing an idea he always had of designing environment starting from microcosm, from small possibilities, fragile materials like paper, and not necessarily with big monuments or town plans. This led to the idea that the environment could also be read through the senses - a sensorial technology of colour, materials, dimensions, rhythms, on which he worked for some 15 years, emphasising the sensorial rather than the structural aspect of whatever he designed. Among the people with whom Sottsass collaborated, loosely grouped under the name Memphis, the sensorial approach was further developed, and decoration was added as yet another means of sending messages to the viewer. Sottsass always rebelled against institutionalised cultures. "Get rid" he says "of the sum of intellectual memories that are conditioning you. Culture is life, and life is always developing, changing, and is always new". So Memphis invented, took ideas from the air, from everywhere and anywhere, and put them together in unexpected unrelated ways. Memphis probably evolved as a result of Sottsass' attitude of seeing life as a continuous dynamic collage of information.
Contents:
Ettore Sottsass, 1983
Early Furniture, 1966. Plywood & Plastic Laminates
First Computer Project For Olivetti, 1959
Office Machinery For Olivetti, 1970s
Olivetti Computer Terminal, 1970
Valentina Typewriter
Ceramics, 1957
Furniture For Poltronova, 1965
The Planet As Festival. A Utopian Lithographic Series, 1972. "Rafts For Listening To Chamber Music"
The Planet As Festival. A Utopian Lithographic Series, 1972. "Wall For Walking On & Viewing The Irrawaddy River & Its Banks"
Mirror, 1970
Environment For Italy. From "Italy: The New Domestic Landscape" Exhibition At MOMA, New York, 1972
Examples Of Sensorialism
Memphis Products, 1981 - 1983. The Sofa Designed For Knoll
In His Own Words.
Notes:
Title from publisher's website (viewed April 24, 2021).
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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