Radical Disco

On view in London an exploration on the relationship between avant-garde architecture and nightlife in Italy during the 1960s and 1970s.

The 1960s and 1970s saw a number of discotheques open across Italy, including several designed by architects of Radical Design, a movement active in the 60s and 70s populated by architects such as Gruppo 9999, Superstudio and UFO.

Dissatisfied by the limitations and ineffectiveness of post-war modern design, these architects sought to use their profession as a tool for societal change and to challenge the idea of architects’ role in society. In a period of change and contestation in Italy more generally, these socially orientated, politicised architects saw discos as a new type of space for multidisciplinary experimentation and creative liberation.

Top: Live music inside L'Altro Mondo, Rimini, 1967. © Pietro Derossi. Above: Installation view of “Radical Disco: Architecture and Nightlife in Italy, 1965-1975”, Institute of Contemporary Arts London (ICA). Photo Ben Westoby

“Radical Disco: Architecture and Nightlife in Italy, 1965 – 1975” explores this little-known phenomenon through archival photographs, architectural drawings, film, music and articles from the international design press. Italy’s discos were known as Pipers, named after the first such venue, which opened in Rome in 1965. Designed by Manilo Cavalli, and Francesco and Giancarlo Capolei it featured reconfigurable furnishings, audio-visual technologies and a stage for Italian and British acts from Patty Pravo to Pink Floyd, who performed against a backdrop of works by artists including Piero Manzoni and Andy Warhol.

Installation view of “Radical Disco: Architecture and Nightlife in Italy, 1965-1975”, Institute of Contemporary Arts London (ICA). Photo Ben Westoby

Pipers generated interest amongst many young architects, sparked by a course on the topic at Florence University. Participants included Gruppo Strum who designed both La Fine del Mondo in Turin (1966) and L’Altro Mondo in Rimini (1968). Florence was home to Superstudio’s Mach 2 (1967) and Gruppo 9999’s Space Electronic (1969). Inspired by New York’s Electric Circus club and Marshall Mcluhan’s media theories, Space Electronic hosted everything from performances by Living Theatre to a vegetable garden. In Milan Ugo La Pietra designed Bang Bang (1968), a disco entered through a boutique, while on the Tuscan coast Gruppo UFO designed Bamba Issa (1969), a Mickey Mouse-inspired disco. These pioneering spaces united innovations in art, architecture, music, theatre and technology. They represent some of the only built examples of Radical architecture. Yet the phenomenon was short-lived, by the mid-1970s most had closed or been transformed into more commercial spaces. At a time when Radical Design’s legacy is being reconsidered and nightclubs are closing across the UK, this presentation explores the relationship between avant-garde architecture and nightlife, and its significance today.

Installation view of “Radical Disco: Architecture and Nightlife in Italy, 1965-1975”, Institute of Contemporary Arts London (ICA). Photo Ben Westoby
Installation view of “Radical Disco: Architecture and Nightlife in Italy, 1965-1975”, Institute of Contemporary Arts London (ICA). Photo Ben Westoby
Installation view of “Radical Disco: Architecture and Nightlife in Italy, 1965-1975”, Institute of Contemporary Arts London (ICA). Photo Ben Westoby
Space Electronic during the Mondial Festival, co-organised by Gruppo 9999 and Superstudio, Space Electronic, Florence, 1971. © Gruppo 9999, courtesy of Carlo Caldini
Gruppo 9999, prototype for the Vegetable Garden House at the Mondial Festival, Space Electronic, Florence, 1971. © Gruppo 9999, courtesy of Carlo Caldini
UFO, amphibious camels returning to Africa, Bamba Issa, Forte dei Marmi, 1969. Photograph by Carlo Bachi, © Lapo Binazzi, UFO Archive
3C+t Capolei Cavalli (Giancarlo Capolei, Pinini Capolei, Manlio Cavalli), side elevation of Piper club, Rome, 1965. © 3c+t Fabrizio Capolei, Pino Abbrescia e Fabio Santinelli (face2face studio), Corrado Rizza
Interior of Piper, Turin designed by Pietro Derossi, Giorgio Ceretti and Riccardo Rosso, 1966. © Pietro Derossi
The stage and audio-visual system inside Piper, Turin, designed by Pietro Derossi, Giorgio Ceretti and Riccardo Rosso, 1966. © Pietro Derossi
Interior of L'Altro Mondo, designed by Pietro Derossi, Giorgio Ceretti and Riccardo Rosso, Rimini, 1967. © Pietro Derossi


until January 10, 2016
Radical Disco
Architecture and Nightlife in Italy, 1965 – 1975

curated by Catharine Rossi and Sumitra Upham
with support from Istituto Italiano di Cultura Londra
ICA Fox Reading Room
Institute of Contemporary Arts
The Mall, London