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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 10

Osvaldo Borsani (Varedo 1911 – Milan

Schätzpreis
60.000 € - 90.000 €
ca. 68.026 $ - 102.039 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 10

Osvaldo Borsani (Varedo 1911 – Milan

Schätzpreis
60.000 € - 90.000 €
ca. 68.026 $ - 102.039 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

Osvaldo Borsani (Varedo 1911 – Milan 1985) Lucio Fontana (Rosario de Santa Fè 1899 – Varese 1968) A CONSOLE, 1950 Manufactured by Arredamenti Borsani Varedo top in black slate with sculptural support element in sculpted, lacquered and gilded wood 92 x 250 x 49 cm Project no. 7234/2 of 1950 for Arredamenti Borsani Varedo Certificate of authenticity from the Archivio Osvaldo Borsani no. 47/2018, dated 25 July 2018 Provenance Milan, Casa S (Sasfaan); Rome, private collection Literature I. De Gutry - M.P. Maino, Il mobile italiano degli anni 40 e 50, Roma 2010, p. 112, n. 14; G. Bosoni, Tecno. L’eleganza discreta della tecnica, Milano 2011, p. 24; G. Bosoni, Osvaldo Borsani Architetto, designer, imprenditore , Milano 2018, pp. 360-361, p. 566 n. 1950.7234 Comparative literature G Gramigna - F. Irace, Osvaldo Borsani Roma 1992, pp. 194-195; N. Foster, T. Fantoni (ed.), Osvaldo Borsani , exh. cat. Triennale di Milano (16 May – 16 September 2018), Milano 2018, p. 75 n. 093, p. 94 Osvaldo Borsani born in Varedo in 1911, was the son of Gaetano, a furniture builder at the famed Atelier di Varedo. He took his diploma in fine arts at the Accademia di Belle Arti before going on to the Politecnico di Milano, where he earned his degree in architecture in 1937. A precocious talent, while he was still a student he presented his ‘Casa Minima’, a rationalist project applied to everyday living space. At the V Milan Triennale; in 1941 he designed Villa Pesenti in Forte dei Marmi; Villa Borsani of Varedo, on which project he invited such young artists as Adriano Spilimbergo Fausto Melotti and Lucio Fontana to collaborate, dates instead to 1943. His work with these artists developed into dozens of projects commissioned by Milan’s bourgeoisie; in particular, he worked intensively with Lucio Fontana a friend since his Accademia days. One still extant sign of this association is the 1956 metal balustrade of the facade of Via Monte Napoleone 27, the building designed by Borsani as family residence and headquarters of the Tecno company. Borsani’s earliest work was at the Atelier di Varedo – renamed Arredamenti Borsani Varedo (ABV) in the 1920s – whose products were prevalently ‘furniture in neo-Renaissance style’ typical of the Brianza tradition, even though the works presented by the Atelier at the 1925 and 1927 editions of the Monza Biennale began to feature more essential, more geometric lines. Borsani made his official debut in the early Thirties at the IV Monza Triennale; when he showed at the V Milan Triennale for the first time in 1933, the 21-year-old student already demonstrated a stylistic maturity and an orientation toward the rationalist codes. In those years, the Atelier received important orders which were filled by a new manufactory and presented at the shop/design studio opened in 1932 in Milan’s Via Monte Napoleone 6. Throughout the Thirties and Forties, Borsani was occupied principally with design of interiors for prestigious homes; during these years, he initiated and consolidated collaborative relationships with such artists as Agenore Fabbri Lucio Fontana Aligi Sassu Roberto Crippa Fausto Melotti and Arnaldo Pomodoro Borsani requested the artists to contribute to design of ceilings, handles, shelving, doorframes, fireplaces and numerous other furnishing elements. His success, both artistic and commercial, was resounding; production continued even during the war years, after which Borsani channelled his energies into his project for passing from traditional artisan to industrial production. Artist Lucio Fontana was an indispensable ‘co-star’ of this important redefinition of interiors. His unique and original, fluctuating Spatialist sign, with its Baroque overtones, permeates and shapes the ceilings, the walls and at times even the furniture of the homes decorated under Osvaldo Borsanì’s skilful direction. The early post-war years were very fertile and rewarding for the Varedo atelier as its occas

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 10
Auktion:
Datum:
31.10.2018
Auktionshaus:
Pandolfini Casa d'Aste
Borgo degli Albizi 26
Palazzo Ramirez-Montalvo
50122 Firenze
Italien
info@pandolfini.it
+39 055 2340888
+39 055 244343
Beschreibung:

Osvaldo Borsani (Varedo 1911 – Milan 1985) Lucio Fontana (Rosario de Santa Fè 1899 – Varese 1968) A CONSOLE, 1950 Manufactured by Arredamenti Borsani Varedo top in black slate with sculptural support element in sculpted, lacquered and gilded wood 92 x 250 x 49 cm Project no. 7234/2 of 1950 for Arredamenti Borsani Varedo Certificate of authenticity from the Archivio Osvaldo Borsani no. 47/2018, dated 25 July 2018 Provenance Milan, Casa S (Sasfaan); Rome, private collection Literature I. De Gutry - M.P. Maino, Il mobile italiano degli anni 40 e 50, Roma 2010, p. 112, n. 14; G. Bosoni, Tecno. L’eleganza discreta della tecnica, Milano 2011, p. 24; G. Bosoni, Osvaldo Borsani Architetto, designer, imprenditore , Milano 2018, pp. 360-361, p. 566 n. 1950.7234 Comparative literature G Gramigna - F. Irace, Osvaldo Borsani Roma 1992, pp. 194-195; N. Foster, T. Fantoni (ed.), Osvaldo Borsani , exh. cat. Triennale di Milano (16 May – 16 September 2018), Milano 2018, p. 75 n. 093, p. 94 Osvaldo Borsani born in Varedo in 1911, was the son of Gaetano, a furniture builder at the famed Atelier di Varedo. He took his diploma in fine arts at the Accademia di Belle Arti before going on to the Politecnico di Milano, where he earned his degree in architecture in 1937. A precocious talent, while he was still a student he presented his ‘Casa Minima’, a rationalist project applied to everyday living space. At the V Milan Triennale; in 1941 he designed Villa Pesenti in Forte dei Marmi; Villa Borsani of Varedo, on which project he invited such young artists as Adriano Spilimbergo Fausto Melotti and Lucio Fontana to collaborate, dates instead to 1943. His work with these artists developed into dozens of projects commissioned by Milan’s bourgeoisie; in particular, he worked intensively with Lucio Fontana a friend since his Accademia days. One still extant sign of this association is the 1956 metal balustrade of the facade of Via Monte Napoleone 27, the building designed by Borsani as family residence and headquarters of the Tecno company. Borsani’s earliest work was at the Atelier di Varedo – renamed Arredamenti Borsani Varedo (ABV) in the 1920s – whose products were prevalently ‘furniture in neo-Renaissance style’ typical of the Brianza tradition, even though the works presented by the Atelier at the 1925 and 1927 editions of the Monza Biennale began to feature more essential, more geometric lines. Borsani made his official debut in the early Thirties at the IV Monza Triennale; when he showed at the V Milan Triennale for the first time in 1933, the 21-year-old student already demonstrated a stylistic maturity and an orientation toward the rationalist codes. In those years, the Atelier received important orders which were filled by a new manufactory and presented at the shop/design studio opened in 1932 in Milan’s Via Monte Napoleone 6. Throughout the Thirties and Forties, Borsani was occupied principally with design of interiors for prestigious homes; during these years, he initiated and consolidated collaborative relationships with such artists as Agenore Fabbri Lucio Fontana Aligi Sassu Roberto Crippa Fausto Melotti and Arnaldo Pomodoro Borsani requested the artists to contribute to design of ceilings, handles, shelving, doorframes, fireplaces and numerous other furnishing elements. His success, both artistic and commercial, was resounding; production continued even during the war years, after which Borsani channelled his energies into his project for passing from traditional artisan to industrial production. Artist Lucio Fontana was an indispensable ‘co-star’ of this important redefinition of interiors. His unique and original, fluctuating Spatialist sign, with its Baroque overtones, permeates and shapes the ceilings, the walls and at times even the furniture of the homes decorated under Osvaldo Borsanì’s skilful direction. The early post-war years were very fertile and rewarding for the Varedo atelier as its occas

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 10
Auktion:
Datum:
31.10.2018
Auktionshaus:
Pandolfini Casa d'Aste
Borgo degli Albizi 26
Palazzo Ramirez-Montalvo
50122 Firenze
Italien
info@pandolfini.it
+39 055 2340888
+39 055 244343
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