Zegna
8 July 2015
30 January 2015
Cristina Celestino was born in Pordenone. After graduating in architecture at the Polytechnic in Milan and a number of collaborations with various architectural studios, in 2009 she opened in Milan “Attico”, a design studio and art gallery and her private dwelling. Collector of historical pieces of Italian design, her primary source of inspiration, she designs for companies and creates original pieces in limited series that she sells to customers from her home / studio. The pleated vases Miuccia, one of her latest creations for the brand Atipico, make explicit reference to fashion, to which Cristina is sensitive, revealing similarities with vintage glass pieces.
WHERE: ATTICO -Via Marcona 80 | 20129 Milano, Italy
Cristina Celestino was born in Pordenone. After graduating in architecture at the Polytechnic in Milan and a number of collaborations with various architectural studios, in 2009 she opened in Milan “Attico”, a design studio and art gallery and her private dwelling. Collector of historical pieces of Italian design, her primary source of inspiration, she designs for companies and creates original pieces in limited series that she sells to customers from her home / studio. The pleated vases Miuccia, one of her latest creations for the brand Atipico, make explicit reference to fashion, to which Cristina is sensitive, revealing similarities with vintage glass pieces.
WHERE: ATTICO -Via Marcona 80 | 20129 Milano, Italy
The Moodboarders is a glance into the design world, which, in all of its facets, captures the extraordinary even within the routine. It is a measure of the times. It is an antenna sensitive enough to pick-up on budding trends, emerging talents and neglected aesthetics. Instead of essays, we use brief tales to tune into the rhythm of our world. We travelled for a year without stopping, and seeing as the memory of this journey has not faded, we have chosen to edit a printed copy. We eliminated anything episodic, ephemeral or fading, maintaining a variety of articles that flow, without losing the element of surprise, the events caught taking place, and the creations having just bloomed.