top of page

Aulenti Collection

Designed by 

Gae Aulenti

Access depends on the item. If a subscription is required, you’ll be redirected to The Vault and you will need to select your subscription plan on the top menu.

Subscription Plan

Silver

Style

Space Age

Brand

Knoll

Required

Base Game

Creator

Meinkatz

About this Product

This fabulous and very clever design consists of a cylindrical “bundle” of triangular tubes that spring from the ground, separate like branches and flow to form the frame, crossbars and armrests. Launched in 1975 by Knoll International, The “Aulenti Collection” was inspired by a series of sketches that displayed fluid shapes branching into space.

About the Designer

ecc4d144-0766-4749-9240-1d44e218b8ee.jpg

Gae Aulenti

Gae Aulenti was an Italian architect and designer whose work played a significant role in shaping postwar Italian design and architecture. Emerging in the 1950s within the vibrant cultural landscape of Milan, she developed a multidisciplinary practice that moved fluidly between architecture, interior design, furniture, and lighting. Aulenti believed in the expressive potential of objects and spaces, often blending historical references with modern materials to create designs that felt both timeless and grounded in their environment. Her work reflects a strong architectural sensibility, where form, structure, and atmosphere are carefully balanced to produce spaces and objects with lasting presence. Throughout her career, she collaborated with major Italian design manufacturers and created several iconic pieces, most famously the Pipistrello lamp for Martinelli Luce in 1965, a design celebrated for its sculptural base and distinctive batwing-shaped diffuser. Beyond product design, Aulenti became internationally recognized for her architectural and exhibition projects, including the transformation of the former Gare d’Orsay railway station into the Musée d’Orsay in Paris. Across furniture, lighting, and architecture, her work combines rational modernism with subtle monumentality, establishing her as one of the most influential figures in twentieth-century Italian design.

More in this style

bottom of page