


Architonic ID: 20340809
Année de Lancement: 2025
Cassina met en production la bibliothèque FF.Spine, conçue à l'origine par Formafantasma pour la Galleria Giustini / Stagetti de Rome pour la collection « 1858 », qui comprenait des meubles fabriqués uniquement à partir de l'un des quatorze millions de sapins déracinés par la tempête Vaia qui a dévasté la forêt du Val di Fiemme en octobre 2018, d'où le nom « 1858 », l'année de naissance de l'arbre. L'engagement des designers pour la récupération des matériaux est désormais réinterprété avec une bibliothèque dont la modularité est réalisée avec des blocs de bois massif, hétérogènes dans leur veinage et leurs coupes, en exploitant au mieux chaque partie de la grume dans le but de préserver les précieuses ressources naturelles. FF.Spine exprime la combinaison de l'esthétique minimaliste des maitres du XXe siècle et de la sobriété formelle polyvalente du design contemporain grâce à une construction extrêmement linéaire alliée à une virtuosité géométrique remarquable. Le système a été conçu pour permettre une utilisation extrêmement flexible et offre différentes configurations ainsi qu'un large choix de finitions qui mettent en valeur la structure du bois et racontent l'histoire de la matière première dans toute sa beauté.
Ce produit appartient à la collection:
Structure bois massif
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Netherlands
Andrea Trimarchi (1983) and Simone Farresin (1980) are Studio Formafantasma, an Italian designers duo based in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Their interest in product design developed on the IM master course at Design Academy Eindhoven, where they graduated in July 2009. Since then, Formafantasma has developed a coherent body of work characterised by experimental material investigations and explored issues such as the relationship between tradition and local culture, critical approaches to sustainability and the significance of objects as cultural conduits. In perceiving their role as a bridge between craft, industry, object and user, they are interested in forging links between their research-based practice and a wider design industry. As a result, works by Studio Formafantasma have been commissioned by a variety of partners including Fendi, Max Mara - Sportmax, Hermès, Droog, Nodus rug, J&L Lobmeyr, Gallery Giustini - Stagetti/Galleria O. Roma, Gallery Libby Sellers, Established and Sons, Lexus and Flos. Whether designing for a client or investigating alternative applications of materials, Studio Formafantasma apply the same rigorous attention to context, process and detail to every project they undertake. The added nuance for the duo is that they do so with an eye to the historical, political and social forces that have shaped their environments. Their work has been presented and published internationally and museums such as New York's MoMA, London’s Victoria and Albert, New York's Metropolitan Museum, the Chicago Art Institute, the TextielMuseum in Tilburg, the Stedelijk’s-Hertogenbosch, MUDAC Lausanne, the Mint Museum of Craft and Design in North Carolina and the MAK Museum in Vienna have all acquired Formafantasma’s designs for their permanent collections. In March 2011 Paola Antonelli of the Museum of Modern Art in New York and esteemed design critic Alice Rawsthorn listed their studio amongst a handful of practices that would shape the future of design. Andrea and Simone are lecturing and heading workshops in various Universities and Institutions. Currently they are teaching at the ‘Well Being’ and 'Contextual Design' Departments of the Design Academy Eindhoven. Since October 2016, they are at the head of the Design bachelor at MADE Program in Siracusa, Italy.