ELLE Decoration (UK)

Design hero

The fiercely intellectu­al Italian who, via his work, sought to articulate the very essence of the city

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One of the postmodern­ist movement’s most radical thinkers, Italian architect and designer Aldo Rossi

‘I cannot be Postmodern,’ declared Italian architect Aldo Rossi (1931–1997), ‘for I have never been Modern.’ His semantic grievance has done little to suppress a legacy as one of the movement’s most radical thinkers, who helped spark it into being in the second half of the 20th century.

His extension of the San Cataldo Cemetery just outside Modena, designed in 1971 as he recuperate­d after a car crash, retains an air of mystery fuelled in part by his evocative descriptor: it was a ‘city of the dead’. With rationalis­t apertures but no roof, windows or doors, the cubic ossuary is at once faintly classical and alarmingly surreal. By all accounts – bar his own – this symbolic city was an early harbinger of postmodern­ism. With it arrived a new way of thinking.

Rossi studied architectu­re at the Polytechni­c University of his Milan hometown, where he would return to teach in the mid 1960s. As Italy’s industrial centre, the city suffered heavy wartime bombing, and the loss of historic buildings and factories had altered its very fabric. With destructio­n came renewal, and though modernism hadn’t yet lost its lustre, post-war Milan was a playground for innovation. Upon graduating in 1959, Rossi became one of the editors of Casabella magazine and opened his own office.

The architectu­ral critic Ada Louise Huxtable would later describe him as ‘a poet who happens to be an architect’. It’s a sentiment that evokes serendipit­y, yet few thought so thoroughly about architectu­ral responsibi­lity as Rossi. His 1966 text The Architectu­re of the City is a trailblazi­ng treatise on urban design, which stresses the historic weight of the public realm. A city is ‘a collective memory of its people’, he reasoned,andthus‘onecannotm­akearchite­cture without studying the condition of life in the city’.

ADA LOUISE HUXTABLE DESCRIBED ROSSI AS ‘A POET WHO HAPPENS TO BE AN ARCHITECT’

Commission­s across Italy and a number of prestigiou­s teaching posts in the 1970s culminated in his creation of the famous floating Teatro del Mondo, while the decade that followed saw Rossi turn prolific product designer. Four of his most famous designs from the period – the ‘Parigi’ chair, ‘Consiglio’ table, ‘Cartesio’ bookcase and ‘Museo’ chair – are reissued by UniFor this month. In 1990, he became the first Italian to be awarded the Pritzker Prize.

His expressive drawings seem to say more about the spirit of a building than any plan for its fabricatio­n. More than 800 of his sketches, photograph­s, models and letters are now on display at an exhibition, sponsored by Molteni & C, at Rome’s MAXXI National Museum of 21st Century Arts, until 17 October. maxxi.art

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Rossi’s ‘Consiglio’ table, UniFor (unifor.it); San Cataldo Cemetery; ‘Carteggio’ cabinet, Molteni & C (molteni. it); ‘Parigi’ armchair, UniFor (unifor.it); the floating Teatro del Mondo for the 1980 Venice Architectu­re Biennale; ‘La Conica’ coffee maker, from £199, Alessi (uk.alessi.com)
Clockwise from top Rossi’s ‘Consiglio’ table, UniFor (unifor.it); San Cataldo Cemetery; ‘Carteggio’ cabinet, Molteni & C (molteni. it); ‘Parigi’ armchair, UniFor (unifor.it); the floating Teatro del Mondo for the 1980 Venice Architectu­re Biennale; ‘La Conica’ coffee maker, from £199, Alessi (uk.alessi.com)
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