Copyright © 2025 Motivate Media Group. All rights reserved.
It featured a colourful poured-resin floor and 400 chairs - each one uniquely designed
The multi-hyphenate Italian architect, designer and artist Gaetano Pesce – whose career of seven decades has seen him have a hand in architecture, town planning, interiors, industrial and exhibition design – created a whimsical yet manifesto-driven set design for Bottega Veneta’s Summer 23 sophomore collection as an ode to diversity.
“This space is a tribute to diversity. It is about the human being; we are all different. We are all different and this is our defining quality – otherwise, we are just a copy. We are all originals, and this is one of the themes of my design,” Pesce declared of the design.
Long known for his humanistic approach to design and architecture, his set for Bottega is an assertion of Pesce’s approach, brought to life by a playful landscape that defies repetition and instead creates an entirely unique environment. In what the brand calls ‘an unprecedented commission’, creative director Matthew Blazy offered Pesce a blank canvas to work with, on which he realised a vast poured-resin floor in bright, saturated tones as well as 400 individually designed chairs – the first original chair the designer has created for some time.
Each unique chair is made from cotton canvas based on traditional toile fabric that was then dipped in coloured resins; some featuring hand drawings of smiling faces. The 400 original pieces will go on to be exhibited at Design Miami and will be available for purchase.
With this set design, Gaetano also questions the cultural production of our time: “As a designer I make originals, not standardised series’, that’s the old way – this is the new way,” he says, “And this is a fashion company that did a fantastic job in helping me realise such a project.
“It is a message that is super political – and it is not a museum or a gallery that is helping me convey it. Who makes culture today? The museum or the fashion company? It is food for the brain – not for pay. If we see the same thing each day, the we die.”
Casa Cazaux designed by Jordana Maisie Design Studio was inspired by Slim Aarons photography of post WWII Italian high society and Mediterranean-inspired coastal architecture
A Collection Where Flow Meets Form
Here's a breakdown of the 21 categories we have for this year's identity Design Awards.
How Vedra, a Boutique Project Development Consultancy is Redefining Development in the UAE
Here's how you can become a landlord and live in your property at the same time.
Lulie Fisher Design Studio Completes a Penthouse in the Intercontinental Dubai Marina
Designed by acclaimed studio Verhaal, KIRA is inspired by the Lunaria plant.
OBMI and Katara Hospitality breathe new life into a 1920s royal residence, balancing heritage and modern luxury on the eucalyptus-clad slopes of Tangiers, Morocco.
Japanese craft meets contemporary design at Kiyoshi designed by Mahsa Gholizadeh
The Design Residency programme 2025 also coincides with the Year of Handicrafts as designated by the Saudi Arabian Ministry of Culture.
The interiors of the Backstage Hotel in Stockholm, Sweden echo the feeling of being behind the scenes at a great performance – rich in texture, layered in story and always with music in the background
Intimate, artistic and unforgettable, The Mellah Hotel is nestled in the heart of Marrakech's ancient medina, just steps from the magnificent Bahia Palace.