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Carlton (New Update 2026)

Designed by

Ettore Sottsass

The Carlton Bookcase by Memphis Milano is an exuberant sculptural shelving unit — part bookshelf, part architectural fantasia — designed in 1981 by Ettore Sottsass that defies ordinary furniture logic. It rises like a colourful, geometric totem of laminates and solids, stitching together a fantasia of rectangles, arches, and cut-out shapes in a playful, Pop-Art palette of reds, blues, yellows and blacks. Its asymmetrical configuration of shelves, cubbies and planes seems to dance sideways as it climbs, inviting books, objects and curios into a communicative display rather than merely storing them. Made from lacquered and laminated wood, the piece embodies the Memphis Group’s radical rejection of functional minimalism in favour of expressive forms that blur art and utility. More than a practical bookcase it’s a cultural manifesto — a joyous, eye-catching icon of postmodern design that turns a room into a conversation.

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Product Information

Brand

Memphis Milano

Designer

Ettore Sottsass

Creator

Meinkatz

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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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Designed by

Ettore Sottsass

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