roomplanners magazine - june 2012
DESCRIPTION
IN THIS ISSUE: Milan! What's new for home from the city of style. Includes highlights from the largest home show in the world, iSaloni 2012. Also... from Leonardo to La Scala: 5 must-see masterpieces in Milan.TRANSCRIPT
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roomplanners JUNE 2012
Milan! what’s hot… from Italy’s fashion capital
isaloni 2012 furniture trends from the largest home show in the world
Milan from Leonardo to LaScala… 5 must-sees in the city of style
made in
about us... on the cover
Dining room from Chic Atmosphere,
one of many exhibitors at the Milan
furniture show, iSaloni 2012.
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2012 trends!
www.roomplanners.com
The recent iSaloni trade
fair in Milan once again
focused the eyes of the
world on home.
As the largest furniture
show in the world, iSaloni
covers over half a billion
square meters, drawing
well over 2,000 exhibitors
of furniture, bathroom and
kitchen products - and
several hundred thousand
retailers and designers.
Ahead, four key themes
driving today’s leading
trends for home...
about us...
www.roomplanners.com JUNE 2012 3
2012
material world
a
WHAT WE SAW...
well-considered material choices, with a material’s
intrinsic qualities, or even its peculiarities, inspiring a particular product design.
surfaces that begged to be touched (from crushed velvet and nubby linen to polished stone and concrete).
stained and painted woods mixed on a single piece of furniture... or wood mixed with metal or fabric in equal proportion.
wood or stone with striated,
fabric-like textures.
upholstered beds!
two or more body fabric mixed on a sofa, or toss pillow combos that mixed texture as much as color.
Interesting to look at, inviting to touch... materials got physical in Milan… becoming almost as important as shape in determining a product’s style.
CLOCKWISE FROM THE TOP:
Cattelan Italia Arketipo
Carl Hansen & Son Divani e Poltrone
the
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of being lightness
The ongoing trend to eliminate clutter, pare back, and otherwise lighten our load is inspiring a lighter look in furniture.
WHAT WE SAW...
white or light-colored fabric, wood and stone; complemented with translucent or frosted glass or acrylic.
floating or cantilevered counters and shelves with a new ‘thinness’.
tall or thin (or both) legs under cabinets, tables and chairs
wafer-thin shelves in metal or wood; offering structural strength with scantier dimensions.
‘open’ sections of shelving (with plenty of dividing panels) - intended to expand space while carefully organizing the things we want to see out in the open.
CLOCKWISE FROM THE TOP: Stua . Chic Atmosphere /Gicinque /Elmar
ABOVE. A mix of furniture styles are tied to-
gether with a soft color palette and nail-head
trim. BELOW. A chestnut wood finish on
the table and cabinet complement chairs in
Tribeca American Treasures Habersham
www.roomplanners.com JUNE 2012 5
WHAT WE SAW...
fresh and unexpected redo’s of historic design ideas.
uninhibited shapes!
unique patchwork effects and unexpected combinations of colors, patterns or textures.
color-blacked effects on sofas,
or cabinets, including contrasting wood-stained and painted woods used together.
statement pieces for every room... an ’accent’ sofa that stood out for its shape or texture… accent chairs from pop-art-inspired to wing chair redo's... and a plethora of upholstered beds!
makers! statement
Interest in more personal décor
and more visual gratification
is driving outstanding
individual and stand-alone
pieces.
CLOCKWISE FROM THE TOP: Flou / Erba / Team 7 / Nova Mobili Prima Fila / Marchi Group
The calendar may say it’s the 21st century. But some of Milan’s
most interesting furniture referenced by-gone days.
WHAT WE SAW...
historic references that were subtle and reinterpreted in a new, modern or personal way, rather than directly reproduced. Favorite inspirations? 19th century drawing rooms and industrial themes, 20th century art deco or mid century modern.
vintage and distressed materials
with an aged, worn or matte quality, including open-grained woods and French laundry linen.
style-setting individual items, such as a bath tub reminiscent of an old washtub, industrial-style work tables and button-tufted sofas and headboards.
CLOCKWISE FROM THE TOP:
Zappalorto Chic Atmosphere Missoni Home Marchi Group Vitra
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for the past nostalgia
five masterpieces from the city of style
MADE IN
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This fast-paced city, centered on banking and fashion, isn’t generally at the top of tourists’ must-see list. Located at the top of the ‘boot’, it’s out of the way of the tourist-drawing cities and towns further south. But Milan offers visitors some compelling attractions to see, from the very old to the cutting edge. It’s not surprising, really. After all, this is Italy…
A Gothic wonder—the Duomo di Milano (Milan Cathedral) is the fourth largest in Europe. Built at a time when the round arches and domes of Renaissance style were taking root, the more conservative Milanese chose Gothic style instead; and a rather flamboyant, overdone version at that. The cathedral boasts 3400 statues, 1500 stained glass windows and drain spouts in the shape of medieval gar-goyles! Construction began in 1386 and fin-ished in 1810… explaining the Italian expres-sion that what takes forever is like ‘making a
cathedral’. The cavernous and elegant marble interior is rivaled only by the cathedral’s roof, where visitors can wander among flying buttresses, a forest of spires and statue-toped spires for a city-wide panorama that stretches to the Alps.
Where better than Italy to immerse yourself in opera? And where better than the LaScala to share the same
ground as have opera’s greatest singers, composers and conductors?
Built in 1778, the famous La Scala
Opera House is one of the most
prestigious opera houses in the world. It was home to Giuseppe Verdi (house composer) and Arturo Toscanini (conductor), not to men-tion opera’s greatest singing stars and grandest works.
Even if you can’t take in a concert
at this operatic icon, you can peak inside its dramatic hall during a visit
to the adjacent Museo Teatrale alla
Scala; a museum filled with opera mementos that include a strand of Mozart’s hair, original Verdi scores and costumes designed by Milanese fashion designers of centuries past.
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The absolutely spectacular, glass-domed Galleria
Vittorio Emanuele II became the model for enclosed
shopping malls in the 20th century, though none quite
have its flair for the dramatic! Built in 1865, its cruci-form shape encloses an arcade of shops… and its awe-inspiring central dome oversees a floor mosaic below that promises good luck to any who spin around on it!
One of Leonardo's da Vinci’s most famous paintings, and star of Dan
Brown’s Da Vinci Code, The Last
Supper was painted on the wall of a monk’s dining wall in a convent adjacent to the Santa Maria della Grazie church in Milan. The paint-
ing represents the last meal shared by Jesus with his disciples before his crucifixion.
Wanting to take his time with this particular work, Leonardo used tempera over gesso instead of the usual fast-drying fresco technique. After the masterpiece was finished in 1498, it deteriorated rapidly.
The fresco received well-meaning but unfortunate ‘touching up’ over the centuries... in between being used for target practice by Napo-leon’s troops! The room was used as a stable for a time, had a door
added under the fresco (cutting away the lower center of the paint-ing!) and even lost its roof during WWII bombs, leaving the fresco exposed to the elements for three years! A recent. lengthy restora-tion did away with some of the damage and all the unfortunate over-painting… leaving something a little closer to what Leonardo intended. The work isn’t just one of the most copied in history, it’s powerful… and well worth a visit.
Attempts to fix the painting resulted in garish versions (above) that had to be stripped away and restored to Leonardo’s quieter Renaissance color palette (top).
Some years after Leonardo finished painting his masterpiece on the wall of the monk’s dining hall, a door was installed… destroying the lower center of the painting!
Currently under construction in the middle of Milan, the Bosco
Verticale will be the world’s first ‘vertical forest’. Designed by
architect Stefano Boeri, this 27-story tower of tree-lined units will offer a model of the ‘vertical densification of nature’ in this dense city.
This first ‘vertical forest’ will include two residential towers, 328 and 250 feet high, hosting 900 trees (each measuring 3, 6 or 10 feet tall) and a wide range of shrubs and floral plants. Measured on flat land, the plants on each Bosco Verticale will be equivalent to 108,000 square feet of forest! In addition to offering privacy and close-up views of nature (even up in the sky!), these plant-covered buildings will help balance the microclimate and filter dust particles.
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Santa Maria della Grazie, Milan.