TRIENNALE MILANO AND MEMPHIS MILANO PRESENT “MEMPHIS AGAIN”

Exhibition from May 18th to June 12th, 2022

directed by

Christoph Radl

 

starring (in order of appearance)

Ettore Sottsass, Michele De Lucchi, George J. Sowden, Martine Bedin, Andrea Branzi, Shiro Kuramata, Marco Zanini, Matteo Thun, Peter Shire, Aldo Cibic, Nathalie Du Pasquier, Gerard Taylor, Masanori Umeda

 

special guests:

Arquitectonica, Michael Graves, Hans Hollein, Arata Isozaki, Javier Mariscal

 

soundtrack by 

Seth Troxler

Dublin, Marco Zanini (1981)
Dublin, Marco Zanini (1981)

Milano, 21 April 2022 - Triennale Milano and Memphis Milano present “Memphis Again”, an exhibition directed and curated by Christoph Radl to be held in the Curva gallery at Triennale from 18 May to 12 June 2022. 

The exhibition presents more than two-hundred pieces of furniture and objects (bookshelves, dividers, vetrines, toilette furniture, dining tables, countertop tables, coffee tables, desks, chairs, couches, sofa beds, table lamps, appliques, floor lamps, chandeliers, ashtrays, flower pots, fruit bowls, fabric accessories, rugs) in the most diverse selection of materials (wood, plastic, laminate, glass, ceramic, porcelain, silver, steel, fabric) produced between 1981 and 1986 for the Memphis collection. 

The objects will be displayed in chronological order in the Curva gallery, which is more than 100 metres long, just like a fashion show in which the observer will be the one moving along the catwalk in a space that, thanks to the furniture and the music by Seth Troxler, feels like a nightclub. Quotes by critics, architects and designers will be projected on the walls.

The exhibition is neither an homage or a historicisation. Its objective today, just as it was back then (1981), is that of directing the attention on the expressive and cultural possibilities of a design that goes beyond marketing. Memphis was born with the desire to adjourn the language of design and architecture. An alternative proposition to a design that is imagined especially to solve industrial functional problems, while underlining the emotional, psychological side and aspect of the issue and of the discipline. Each designer, for example, was free to design what they wanted, without any restrictions. Later, when it shifted from being a cultural necessity to becoming, as expected, “projects and prototypes”, a company to distribute and sell was founded. And it worked.

Barbara Radice stated in 1981: “Memphis does not deny functional utopia, but it looks at functionality with a wider vision, more as an anthropologist than as a marketing specialist. Function therefore not only in respecting ergonomic norms or salability statistics, but also in respecting a vision of public necessity, a historic push.”

And Ettore Sottsass: “I would have loved to suggest a sort of non-cultural iconographic, a culture that belongs to no one (not an anonymous culture), but the iconography of a culture that is not used and not usable, not because it doesn't exist, not even because it is not utilised, but because it can’t be looked at, because it is not considered, because it doesn't belong, because it looks like it doesn'tdoesn't exist in known culture, and maybe it doesn't even produce culture. These areas of non-culture, these areas of “no one’s culture” do exist”.

The need to get rid of certain conventions is still very contemporary. Sottsass: “The fact is that we no longer are scared: I mean the fear of having to represent or not represent something or someone, élites or derelicts, traditions or boorishness. We no longer fear what the past sends along nor do we fear what the more aggressive future sends.”

The importance of Memphis for the world of design can also be seen in Triennale's Museo del Design Italiano, where the display ends in 1981. With objects, photographs and graphic materials, it offers a special focus on how this cultural movement marked the start of a new era in the production of design both in Italy and around the world

The Institutional Partners Eni and Lavazza, and the Technical Partner ATM are giving their support to Triennale Milano also for this exhibition.


NOTES TO THE EDITORS

"Memphis Again"

Exhibition from May 18th to June 12th, 2022

directed by Christoph Radl

starring (in order of appearance): Ettore Sottsass, Michele De Lucchi, George J. Sowden, Martine Bedin, Andrea Branzi, Shiro Kuramata, Marco Zanini, Matteo Thun, Peter Shire, Aldo Cibic, Nathalie Du Pasquier, Gerard Taylor, Masanori Umeda

special Guests: Arquitectonica, Michael Graves, Hans Hollein, Arata Isozaki, Javier Mariscal

soundtrack by Seth Troxler

Tickets: 12 euro (Full) / 10 euro (Reduced)

Triennale Milano Opening Hours:

Tuesday – Sunday

11am – 8pm (last admission, 7pm)

Triennale Milano Special Opening Hours:

Friday 3 to Sunday 12 June 

Extended opening of all exhibitions: 11am to 9pm (last admission, 8pm)

Triennale will remain open to the public on Monday 6 June 

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About Memphis Milano

Memphis was born from a cultural movement initiated by Ettore Sottsass in 1981 with the intention of giving life to products he designed and to products designed by a group of young architects and designers with whom he interacted, among which Aldo Cibic, Matteo Thun, Marco Zanini, Martine Bedin, Michele De Lucchi, Nathalie Du Pasquier and George Sowden.

Memphis was born as a lab for the development of new project ideas and soon became a cultural phenomenon. With Ettore Sottsass as the point of reference for the group, and with Barbara Radice as artistic director, the first collection was presented at Salone del Mobile in 1981. From the start, Memphis’ design has represented a new expressive concept that is tied to new shapes, new materials, new patterns, and that has redesigned living habits by revolutionizing their logic and conquering the design world.

Acquired by the Italian Radical Design group in 2022, Memphis continues to influence the imagination of the general public, from fashion to the film and television industry. The liberating spirit of Memphis is still a source of inspiration for many today.

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