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Callimaco

Designed by 

Ettore Sottsass

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Subscription Plan

Gold

Style

Postmodern

Brand

Artemide

Required

Base Game

Creator

Meinkatz

About this Product

Callimaco is a luminous, characterful object designed for Artemide by Ettore Sottsass in 1982, and it feels less like a discreet domestic accessory than a small, self-assured presence placed in the room, standing with the confidence of a graphic totem. Its playful contrasts and bold personality echo the cultural energy of the early 1980s, when design began to speak openly about emotion, colour and symbolism rather than quiet restraint. Callimaco transforms light into a visual statement, gently theatrical yet unmistakably human in spirit, capturing Sottsass’s desire to turn everyday objects into expressive companions that bring warmth, irony and imagination into daily life.

About the Designer

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Ettore Sottsass

Ettore Sottsass was an Italian architect and designer. His work included furniture, jewelry, glass, lighting, home and office objects, as well as many buildings and interiors. He grew up in Turin and graduated in Architecture from the Politecnico di Torino in 1939. In 1947, in Milan, he founded his architecture and industrial design studio, where he began to create work using various media. In 1956, Sottsass went to New York and began to work in George Nelson’s design studio. Back in Italy, he established major collaboration projects with Poltronova (1957) and Olivetti (1958). From the late ’60s and throughout the ’70s he collaborated with Superstudio and Archizoom Associati, within the Radical movement, until the foundation of Memphis Group in 1981, of which he was a founding member. In the mid-’80s, with Sottsass Associati, mainly an architecture studio, he also designed elaborate shops and showrooms, company identities, exhibitions, interiors, Japanese consumer electronics, and furniture of all kinds. Ettore Sottsass was presented numerous international awards, winning the ADI Compasso d’Oro in 1959. His work is on show in the permanent collections of many museums around the world such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Centre G. Pompidou in Paris, and the Victoria & Albert Museum in London

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