Go Your Own Way: Tobia Scarpa
A chip of the old block Tobia Scarpa certainly isn’t. Son of acclaimed architectural maestro Carlo Scarpa, the innovative designer, who turns 80 next year, was determined from the outset to plough his own creative furrow, in spite of his architectural training. His legacy is a raft of game-changing furniture and lighting pieces that test the bounds of what’s materially and technologically possible. Architonic met up with Mr Scarpa, Jr, at the Cassina showroom during this year’s imm cologne to discuss creativity, family and falling out of love with Alvar Aalto’s tables. Whatever you do, don’t call him an architect.
February 8, 2014 | 11:00 pm CUT

'I appreciate everything I’ve done, while recognising the limits of it.' Architect and designer Tobia Scarpa reflects on his creative career as he approaches his 80th birthday

Tobia Scarpa speaks as part of a panel discussion at Cassina's Cologne showroom during imm cologne 2014 on the golden age of Italian design. On his right, Florian Löhle, North Europe Country Manager for Cassina


Cassina’s acquisition of the iconic brand SimonCollezione brings with it designs by the likes of Marcel Breuer and Kazuhide Takahama, as well as both of the Scarpas, Carlo and Tobia. Shown here, Carlo Scarpa's 'Doge' (top) and 'Florian' (above) tables

'The truth is I became a designer because I didn’t want to interfere with the work of my father', says Tobia Scarpa, son of renowned Venetian architect Carlo Scarpa, shown here

Detail of Carlo Scarpa's 'Orseolo' table for SimonCollezione, now part of the Cassina brand

Launched in 1968, Tobia Scarpa's 'Biagio' lamp for Flos, carved from a single block of marble

The game-changing 'Coronado' armchair for B&B Italia, launched in 1966. 'Before I invented this, it took three hours to build the armchair, and after that 15 minutes,' says Tobia Scarpa

Tobia Scarpa's stackable 'Boomerang' chair for Meritalia

Launched in 1966, Tobia Scarpa's 'Foglio' wall lamp, with its powder-painted, pressed-steel wings, provides diffused illumination

Tobia Scarpa's 'Bia' armchair for Meritalia, with its single-piece cover

Tobia Scarpa: 'For me it’s really fun to discover something that stimulates me to create an object, because the object is, I believe, a gift that honours the intelligence of the other'
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