With a new show 'Nice to See you' headlining at the Pinacoteca Ambrosiana in Milan and projects spanning collections for Fish Design and a playful collaboration with sock brand Double Soul, the visionary creative sadly passed away early last month. To celebrate his illustrious career, we are re-publishing our recent story on the multidisciplinary designer, architect and artist whose curiosity would shape six decades of design and elevate our connection with the world around us.
Designer, architect and artist, the work of legendary creative Gaetano Pesce is everywhere, all at once. His iconic 1960s UP collection for B&B Italia celebrated 50 years, with four designs still in production; he's made the pages of Vogue and Vogue Living with expansive features on his work, along with two new books, ‘Out in the World with Gaetano Pesce’ and ‘Gaetano Pesce the Complete Incoherence’; and has shown in Los Angeles, New York, Miami, Milan and Melbourne, with another in the planning for Rio de Janeiro. At 83, Gaetano Pesce is a man on a mission.
In 2022 an illustration by Gaetano Pesce covered the Aspen Art Museum with giant, colourful mountain peaks from the designer’s ‘My Dear Mountains’ series that would shape-shift into a limited series of bags for fashion house Bottega Veneta at Milan Design Week. My Dear Mountains is a theme Pesce has been working on for a while, and like all of his work it’s personal. Embracing figuration and stories, rather than pure function (he detests modernism), the collection is typically idiosyncratic, based on the mountains of his early years in Italy and the prairies of America, his home today. ‘I wanted a bag with an optimistic view,’ remarked the designer at its launch. ‘The future has to be figurative and it has to communicate – such an object has to tell a story.’
Gaetano Pesce grew up in La Spezia and studied architecture in Venice. Early in his career he wrote a manifesto defending the right to incoherence in art, the need for change, to be free, and not to repeat oneself. It’s a philosophy that shaped his career. For Pesce whose work explores what he describes as ‘the liquidity of our time’, the borders between art, design and industry are irrelevant. His continuous research into materials, visual language and technology have been translated into a myriad of designs, for manufactures and for limited edition, many now iconic and highly collectable, and all with a story.
One of the most evocative stories is his 1969 UP Series developed in collaboration with B&B Italia. It included seven voluptuously potent chairs (four still remain in production), the most famous, UP5, also known as La Mamma, would be the first production piece to hold a political message. For Pesce, a designer at the zeitgeist of social change, putting form to a piece that celebrated the power of women by denouncing systemic patriarchy, he would immortalise the moment with one of the Salone del Mobile’s most talked about events. As onlookers watched, the UP5 was released from its cryovac state, slowly taking form, its air-sensitive foam expanding to the awe of the crowd.
‘The future has to be figurative and it has to communicate – such an object has to tell a story.’
Gaetano Pesce
Material experiments define Pesce’s practice and continue inside his Brooklyn studio, and through collections held by MoMA and the New York Metropolitan Museum, the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Centre Pompidou, and the Vitra Design Museum, and, for a brief moment, at the Piazza del Duomo in the centre of Milan to mark UP5’s 50th birthday. The towering 26-foot version of his infamous La Mamma armchair would be a reminder that Gaetano Pesce still has a lot to say.
Gaetano Pesce's UP Series for B&B Italia is available exclusively in South East Asia from Space – Australia, and Space – Singapore and Kuala Lumpur.