Sottsass, rebel and poet

Considered one of the most influential and unconventional figures in twentieth-century design, Ettore Sottsass is celebrated through an exhibition at the Vitra Schaudepot.

This summer, the exhibition “Ettore Sottsass, rebel and poet” by the Vitra Design Museum celebrates the 100th birthday of the Austro-Italian designer considered to be one of the most influential and unconventional figures in twentieth-century design.

<b>Top:</b> unknown photographer, Ettore Sottsass, 1973. Courtesy Studio Ettore Sottsass. <b>Above:</b> Ettore Sottsass, series <i>Metafore</i>, Vich, 1973. Courtesy Studio Ettore Sottsass
Ettore Sottsass, Califfo Sofa, 1964. Photo JÅrgen Hans
Ettore Sottsass, Halo Click table lamp, 1988, and Tahiti table lamp, 1981. Photo JÅrgen Hans.tif, 1964
Ettore Sottsass, Tahiti, Don and Halo Click table lamps. Photo JÅrgen Hans
Ettore Sottsass and Perry A. King, Valentine for Olivetti, 1969. Photo Alberto Fioravanti, courtesy Studio Ettore Sottsass
Left: Ettore Sottsass, drawings for the Tahiti and Cavalieri lamps, 1981. Right: Ettore Sottsass, Ashoka table lamp, 1981. Photo JÅrgen Hans
Left: Ettore Sottsass, 1988, photo Barbara Radice. Right: Ettore Sottsass, 1984, photo Barbara Radice. Courtesy Studio Ettore Sottsass

  He gained renown with his designs for the office equipment manufacturer Olivetti, for his poetic, minimalist sculptural objects, and as the leading figure of the Memphis design collective in the 1980s. Over the course of his long career, Ettore Sottsass moved between disciplines, leaving behind a fascinating oeuvre that at Vitra Schaudepot is represented by approximately 30 of his furniture designs, consumer products, as well as numerous photographs and writings.

Ettore Sottsass © Bruno Gecchelin, 1974 – By SIAE 2017

Sottsass’s most famous works are his furniture designs for the Memphis group, which created a sensation and ushered in the postmodern aesthetic of the 1980s. The shrill colours, patterns and forms of Memphis objects were inspired by motifs from everyday life, Pop culture and the non-European civilisations encountered by Sottsass during his extensive travels from the 1960s onward. This resulted in iconic objects like the Carlton bookcase (1981), the lamps Ashoka (1981) and Tahiti (1981), and the Tartar table (1985) – expressive objects that sought to communicate with the viewer and liberate themselves from a functionalist design approach. Sottsass did not regard form and function as constraints, but rather viewed design as an opportunity to explore the nature of human existence.

Ettore Sottsass, serie Metafore, Vich, 1973. Courtesy Studio Ettore Sottsass


14 July – 24 September 2017
Ettore Sottsass. Rebel and poet
curated by Heng Zhi
Vitra Schaudepot
Charles-Eames-Straße 2, Weil am Rhein