Post Modern Italian Furniture Styles in the 80s
- Shockingly bright and highly fashionable, clear cut and angular, kitsch pop art motifs from 50's cafes and Bob Dylan references, comic books blazoned onto plastics, neon tubes jazzed up--you have stumbled upon the Memphis style from Milan known as 80's romanticism. It's fondly described as the "who cares if it's uncomfortable, look at all the great photographs" school of furniture design. Memphis follows in the postmodern footsteps of 60's pop art and 70's punk by continuing to up-heave the "smart but soulless" modernist rulebook and post-World War II "international style" with its absence of pop reference.
- You can't talk about postmodern without talking about pop art. In 1962, Sidney Janis Gallery New York, a massive pop art exhibit, influenced critics to officially open curtains to the "postmodern" era. It would become a morally ambiguous reaction to modernism's formal rulebook and seriousness, and would reflect the post-World War II multicultural living space. The 1960s was a radical pool of deconstruction-- colonial backlash and student riots, hippie culture and The Beatles, extreme left wing and neo-Marxist ideals. Pop art is anarchical and deconstructive, mocking the established high art circle by declaring debase popular icons like Coke bottles and soup cans as art. Its influence on the Memphis group is in the breaking down of high and low culture by using kitsch and continued breaking away from the "international style" and the "smart but soulless" modernist.
- Famous creations include the striking "Red Valentine" typewriter, the "Carlton Cabinet" made of wood and plastic and painted in primary colors, and the blood orange "Dublin sofa." Ettore Sottsass and Marco Zanini are the key figures to take away with you. Philippe Starck, a French offshoot, flavored Memphis pop art influence with French visual gags and cartoons. The 80's Memphis Milano continues the tradition of being comfortable with new materials after a post war decade that cleaved earthy, friendly colors and woody materials.
- Memphis-Milano shared the stage with the dark side of 80's postmodern design in London, which drew on a spirit of urban blight and 70's punk nihilism. Images of razor blades, graffiti and industry from punk-inspired pieces like the "Rover Chair," converted from a car seat.
Memphis -Milano
Post Modernism and Pop Art
Memphis Group Famous Pieces
London Industrial Post-Punk
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