Lighting Designer Lindsey Adelman Shares Highlights from Salone del Mobile Inline
Photo: Courtesy of Lindsey Adelman1/13“Massimiliano is an incredibly talented architect and furniture designer who also shows with Nina Yashar of Nilufar Gallery. In this church, he designed and constructed a freestanding three-floor office for his firm without touching any of the historical frescoed walls. The installation for Salone was awe-inspired.”
Photo: Courtesy of Lindsey Adelman2/13“The Nendo Retrospective at Museo della Permanente presented apparently one-year’s worth of work in such a massive space it felt like a decade’s. Minimalist and pure with a wry sense of humor.”
Photo: Courtesy of Lindsey Adelman3/13“Me with Dimore Studio founders Britt Moran and Emiliano Salci. Dimore Studio keeps getting more amazing. They transformed their Milan live/work space once again; it felt like an eerie, emotional set of an intense film of a lost era.”
Photo: Courtesy of Lindsey Adelman4/13Palazzo Litta, a seventh-century Baroque marvel, reimagined by architect Michele de Lucchi
“I was seduced by the staggering romance of the Baroque details found in the walls, ceilings, and chandeliers. The exhibit presented by DAMN magazine included direction by Michele de Lucchi entitled the ‘Aesthetics of Misery.’ Such good drama.”
Photo: Courtesy of Lindsey Adelman5/13At Restart, designer Maurizio Navone paired Alcantara fabrics with artist and photographer **Carlo Mollino’**s nude Polaroids from the sixties and seventies, from the collection of gallerist Francesca Kauffman.
“This gallery on via Santa Marta showed a domestic setting of Mollino’s work, including a few of his famous Polaroids of dancers cleverly hung partially concealed by velvet curtains.”