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De Padova

Donzelletta

This chair by Michele De Lucchi echoes the lines of the more traditional Donzella. More agile and lighter, Donzelletta interprets the V motif of the original backrest by giving it a sleeker, more contemporary look. The structure is in solid bleached or black ash and the seat comes in woven straw or is covered in fabric or leather.

Technical Specifications
Materials:

FRAME: solid aniline-dyed ash wood, bleached or black, finished with transparent water-based or solvent-based coating.

SEAT: birch plywood (class E1, CARB P2 / TSCA Title VI certified),padded with polyurethane foam or covered with hand-woven natural paper rope.

EXTERNAL COVER: non-removable cover in fabric or leather
Meet the designer
Michele De Lucchi

In the age of radical and experimental architecture, he was a prominent figure in movements like Cavart, Alchymia and Memphis. For Olivetti he was Director of Design from 1992 to 2002 and he developed experimental projects for Compaq Computers, Philips, Siemens and Vitra as well as developing experimental projects and conceiving a number of personal theories on office development.

De Lucchi has designed lighting fixtures and furniture items for the best known Italian and European companies, museums, he has designed or refurbished buildings worldwide for companies and financial institutions, such as Deutsche Bank in Germany, Poste Italiane, Telecom Italia, Intesa Sanpaolo and Unicredit in Italy, introducing technical and aesthetic innovations in work places.

He designed set-ups for art and design exhibitions, as well as private buildings and exhibiting layouts. More recently he designed numerous projects in Milan: pavilions at Expo 2015 (Padiglione Zero, Expo Center and Intesa Sanpaolo Padiglione) and iconic Unicredit pavilion in the new Gae Aulenti square. His professional work has always gone side-by-side with a personal exploration of architecture, design, technology and crafts. Several of his products are exhibited in the most important design Museums in Europe, United States and Japan. In 2000 he was appointed Officer of Italian Republic by President Ciampi, for services to design and architecture. In 2001 he was nominated Professor at the Design and Art Faculty at the University in Venice. In 2006 he received an Honorary Doctorate from Kingston University for his contribution to “living quality”.

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