優(yōu)選答案Achille Giacomo Castiglioni (1918 - 2002)
Achille Giacomo Castiglioni was born in Milan and, as early as 1940, he devoted himself to experimenting with mass-produced artifacts, with his architect brothers Livio (1911-1979) and Pier Giacomo (1913-1968). After Achille received his degree in architecture in 1944, he and Pier Giacomo initiated their designing career; the poetic was entirely based on novel forms, techniques and "new" materials. The aim was to attain an "integral" design process. One of the founders of the Industrial Design Association, he has starred in numerous Milan Triennale shows. It culminated in the 1979 "New Triennale," where he was one of the twelve Italians in the Design Collection. Castiglioni's part in creating some of the cleverest modern design objects has been particularly important. Belonging to a variety of types, they have been a big success internationally. In addition, he has created a host of installations, including those for the Triennale itself and for the exhibition of Zanotta's collection at Linz's 1980 Forum Design. His production is portrayed in the essays on Italian design and in the records of the Compasso d'Oro (which he has won several times). Also, it can be found in the major design museums. In 1980 the archives of the practice run by Achille and Pier Giacomo were acquired by the Study Center and Communication Archives at the University of Parma. In 1984 his one-man traveling show opened at the Museum für Angewandte Kunst in Vienna. Later, it played at the Berlin Hochschule für Bildende Kunste, Milan's Triennale, the Kunstgewerbe Museum in Zurich, the Hague's Gemeentemuseum, the Madrid Circulo des Bellas Artes and the Centre Georges Pompidou - Beaubourg in Paris. In 1986 the Rohsska Konstslöjdmuseet in Göteborg staged an exhibit of his pieces created for Zanotta and Flos. Besides his designing and criticism (for Stile Industria in the 1950s), since 1969 he has taught, too. Since 1981 he has been professor of Decorating and Industrial Design at the School of Architecture of the Milan Polytechnic. Achille Castiglioni has been working for Zanotta since 1964.
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Pier Giacomo Castiglioni(1913-1968)
The Italian designer and architect Pier Giacomo Castiglioni is the second of the three Castiglioni brothers. Like his brothers, Pier Giacomo Castiglioni studied architecture at Milan Polytechnic, taking his degree in 1937. In 1938 Pier Giacomo Castiglioni and his elder brother, Livio, founded a practice in Milan, which the youngest brother, Achille, joined in 1944. All three Castiglioni brothers were interested in both technology and art. Livio left the joint practice in 1952 to go his own way. Pier Giacomo Castiglioni is regarded as the intellectual equal of his brother Achille. Until his untimely death in 1968, Pier Giacomo collaborated with Achille on numerous designer objects.
In 1957 the exhibition "Colori e forme nella casa d'oggi" (Colors and Forms in Today's Home) was mounted at the Villa Olmo in Como, where Achille and Pier Giacomo Castiglioni annoyed specialists with their vision of a modern lifestyle because what they showed was a colorful jumble of styles that incorporated old and new furnishings instead of uniformly styled interiors. Achille and Pier Giacomo Castiglioni showed many of their designs, including for the first time their "readymades". "Mezzadro", a stool consisting of a tractor seat mounted on a substructure and "Sella", a telephone stool with a bicycle saddle as a seat were not made until many years later, by Zanotta. The two brothers were particularly successful with the lighting they designed for Arredoluce, Flos, and Artemide. They playfully explored new possibilities for form, linking technical innovation and Minimalist economy of means to produce highly functional objects which were just as aesthetically satisfying as they were practical. In 1955 the Castiglionis designed "Luminator" for Arredoluce; their "Taraxacum" hanging lamp dates from 1960. Another Castiglioni design for Flos was the 1962 die lamp "Arco", which links the qualities of floor and hanging lamps. The Castiglioni brothers not only exerted a strong influence on the younger generation of Italian designers.
Pier Giacomo Castiglioni taught design at Milan Polytechnic from 1946 until his death. Achille Castiglioni also taught interior decoration and industrial design there from 1982 until 1986 and was a professor of industrial design at Turin Polytechnic from 1970 until 1980. The Museum of Modern Art collection owns many works by Achille and Pier Giacomo Castiglioni.
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Awards of Achille and Pier Giacomo Castiglioni:
Gold Medal Mia International Exhibition 1968
First Prize 5 Stelle Tecnhotel Selection Compasso d'Oro 1981,1987,1991