Casablanca Sideboard

Ettore Sottsass Jr.; Memphis Milano

Brooklyn Museum photograph

Object Label

Today when we think of where inventive contemporary design is manufactured, we often think of Italy. This, however, was not always the case. Wide acceptance of modern design came somewhat later in Italy than elsewhere, perhaps because of the ever-present conservative influence of the palpable Roman classical past and the slow development of the Italian economy in the twentieth century. To be sure, before World War II there were important modern designers in Italy, foremost Gio Ponti, an architect from Milan whose influence spread beyond his native country through two architecture and design magazines he founded, Domus and Stile. And the Fascist regime of Mussolini in the pre-World War II period did embrace modern architecture, unlike the Nazi regime in Germany, which consciously rejected modernism as a source of foreign, moral corruption. It was not, however, until the post-World War II era, when the Italian economy expanded rapidly, that Italian modern design achieved international recognition.

One pivotal event made consumers in the United States aware of the diversity and accomplishments of modern Italian design—the exhibition Italy at Work, which travelled to twelve venues between 1950 and 1954. The exhibition was initiated by the Art Institute of Chicago in partnership with two organizations devoted to the promulgation of Italian design, Handicraft Development Incorporated in the United States and its corresponding institution in Italy, CADMA. Italy at Work included hundreds of objects by more than 150 artisans and manufacturers and featured furniture, ceramics, glass, textiles, metalwork, jewelry, shoes, knit clothing, and industrial design. The exhibition opened at the Brooklyn Museum, and at its conclusion, when the objects were dispersed among the host institutions, the lion’s share, more than two hundred items, came to the Museum.

In the second half of the twentieth century, Italy became a center for modern design. Many foreigners went there to study and work at small, adventurous firms that produced high-quality objects.

In 1980, Ettore Sottsass, Jr., one of the senior Italian designers of the time, founded the Milan design cooperative Memphis with two colleagues, Andrea Branzi and Allesandro Mendini. Memphis pieces, such as the "Casablanca" cabinet displayed here, were self-consciously flamboyant riffs on the postmodern design then in vogue. Although the cooperative lasted only for five years, its risky exuberance expanded the boundaries of modern furniture and continues to influence designers today.

Caption

Ettore Sottsass Jr. Italian, born Austria, 1917–2007; Memphis Milano 1980 – 1987. Casablanca Sideboard, designed 1981. Wood, plastic laminate, 90 1/2 x 59 x 15 3/4 in. (229.9 x 149.9 x 40 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Furniture of the 20th Century, Inc., 83.104. Creative Commons-BY (Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 83.104_colorcorrected_SL1.jpg)

Gallery

Not on view

Title

Casablanca Sideboard

Date

designed 1981

Geography

Place manufactured: Italy

Medium

Wood, plastic laminate

Classification

Furniture

Dimensions

90 1/2 x 59 x 15 3/4 in. (229.9 x 149.9 x 40 cm)

Signatures

no signature

Inscriptions

no inscriptions

Markings

on back of lower small black cabinet: "1981 / ETTORE / SOTTASS / MADE IN ITALY" printed in white.

Credit Line

Gift of Furniture of the 20th Century, Inc.

Accession Number

83.104

Rights

Creative Commons-BY

You may download and use Brooklyn Museum images of this three-dimensional work in accordance with a Creative Commons license. Fair use, as understood under the United States Copyright Act, may also apply. Please include caption information from this page and credit the Brooklyn Museum. If you need a high resolution file, please fill out our online application form (charges apply). For further information about copyright, we recommend resources at the United States Library of Congress, Cornell University, Copyright and Cultural Institutions: Guidelines for U.S. Libraries, Archives, and Museums, and Copyright Watch. For more information about the Museum's rights project, including how rights types are assigned, please see our blog posts on copyright. If you have any information regarding this work and rights to it, please contact copyright@brooklynmuseum.org.

Frequent Art Questions

  • What's the significance of this piece to Brooklyn?

    This was designed by a very influential Italian firm in the 1980s that went by the name 'Memphis' and was acquired just a few years after it was made. The decorative arts collection here is international, and it included objects that were groundbreaking works of design and that also were influential.
    The style of this sideboard became huge in the 80s the bold colors, the speckled finishes, the geometrical forms. The Memphis Group consciously designed furniture that pushed traditional boundaries between elite culture and low culture and between high and low art.
  • This piece reminds me of Yayoi Kusama!

    I can definitely see that! Although that piece is Italian, the dots are definitely a connection. We in fact have a few Yayoi Kusamas paintings, but none of them are currently on view.
    That's sad!
  • Is this modern art?

    This is a perfect example of postmodern design. This was a style that was intentionally funny-looking, tacky and designed to go out of style!
    That's weird!
    Yes! For the first half of the 20th century, modern design was all about being very simple, undecorated and in "good taste". Eventually people got bored of that and started to design objects that broke all of the rules! Do you see that patterned material on the surface of the sideboard? That was linoleum - a cheap material that would have been used in bathrooms and kitchens - but never on furniture! The pattern was designed by Ettore Sottsass Jr. and is called the “Bacterio” pattern. Again this is a reversal of the modernist tenet that design should be clean and hygienic. The designer was being very playful and ironic!
  • What a strange object!

    This "Casablanca Sideboard" is a product of The Memphis group, a design collective based out of Italy in the 1980s. They were known for creating Postmodern furniture with eccentric, unconventional forms.
    Some of the elements that make this piece Postmodern include emphasis on surface decoration, dishonest use of materials (wood disguised with laminate), lack of functionality (inverted shelves), and trendiness (it was designed to go out of fashion).
  • Tell me more.

    The sideboard was designed by a very influential Italian firm in the 1980s called Memphis. The Memphis Group consciously designed furniture that pushed traditional boundaries between high and low culture and art. This style–the bold colors, speckled finishes, and geometrical forms–became very popular in the 80s. It is a great example of postmodern design: intentionally funny-looking, tacky, and designed to go out of style. Some of the shelves are actually inverted and wouldn't have even been functional.
  • There are a couple pieces here by some Italian designers post World War II, and I remember there being a name for this group?

    Like something vaguely American, Chicago is coming to mind but I don't think that's right.
    Are you perhaps thinking of the Memphis Group?
    Oh!!! Totally!!! Thank you!!!
    They were an Italy based design collective that created Postmodern furniture around the 1980s.

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