Nanda Vigo
Italian designer Nanda Vigo started her own atelier in Milan in 1959, and soon after began to exhibit her designs in many galleries and museums around Italy and Europe. She later earned her architecture degree and began formulating her own theory of space and time, autonomous to artistic practice. Her more recent designs have stemmed from this exploration, focusing on sensory impulses through materials such as glass, mirrors, and neon lights. She has famously collaborated with Italian designer Gio Ponti, as well as Arte Povera pioneers Lucio Fontana and Piero Manzoni; she was featured in multiple iterations of the Triennale di Milano, as well as the Venice Biennale in 1982.
Nanda Vigo
Nanda Vigo
Italian designer Nanda Vigo started her own atelier in Milan in 1959, and soon after began to exhibit her designs in many galleries and museums around Italy and Europe. She later earned her architecture degree and began formulating her own theory of space and time, autonomous to artistic practice. Her more recent designs have stemmed from this exploration, focusing on sensory impulses through materials such as glass, mirrors, and neon lights. She has famously collaborated with Italian designer Gio Ponti, as well as Arte Povera pioneers Lucio Fontana and Piero Manzoni; she was featured in multiple iterations of the Triennale di Milano, as well as the Venice Biennale in 1982.
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Designers
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- 967Arch
- AC/AL Studio
- Achille & Pier Giacomo Castiglioni
- Achille Castiglioni
- Adele Martelli
- Adolf Loos
- Adolf Loos & Josef Frank
- Afteroom Studio
- Alain Berteau
- Alain Gilles
- Alatere Collateral Design
- Alba Gallizia
- Alberico B. Belgiojoso
- Alberto Basaglia and Natalia Rota Nodari
- Alberto Colombi
- Alberto Lievore
- Alberto Mantegna
- Alberto Saggia & Valerio Sommella
- Aldo Bakker
- Alessandro Busana
- Alessandro Dubini
- Alessandro Elli
- Alessandro Mendini
- Alessandro Pedretti
- Alessio Bassan
- Alessio Bassan & Silvano Pierdona
- Allan Gould
- Alonso González
- Alvino Bagni