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Kartell - Product Review

Architectural Review, The, June, 2003

The prize for Best-in-Show for exhibition stands must go to Kartell's groovy candy-coloured homage to the '70s, with Farrah Fawcett flicks for the girls and afros for the boys. Furniture-wise, French enfant terrible Philippe Starck added to his Kartell role of honour with Maria Antonietta (522). a small goblet-shaped table in injection-moulded transparent polycarbonate. Starck also showed Mademoiselle (521). an armchair that inventively combines the apparently incompatible materials of polycarbonate and polyurethane. The polyurethane seat (mass coloured or fabric upholstered) is fixed to the transparent polycarbonate base. Elsewhere on Planet Kartell, Antonio Citterio gave us Spoon (520). a 'revolutionary' stool, shaped like (you've guessed it) a spoon. It's adjustable by means of a gas lift, but Citterio's cunning design means the elegant spoon-like line is preserved. Available in white, black, red, and, er, curry. To takeaway, perhaps.

www.arplus.com/enq.html

Enquiries 520, 521, 522.

COPYRIGHT 2003 EMAP Architecture
COPYRIGHT 2003 Gale Group

 

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