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Design
fans shouldn't miss the wonderful exhibition in
Milan's Palazzo Gallarati Scotti which celebrates
15 years of collaboration between the internationally
acclaimed Parisian designer Phillippe Starck
and Driade, the Milanese interior design
company synonymous with quality Italian design
since 1968.
Starck and Driade first met up in 1985. It was
love at first sight. They both share the same
ideas on the simplicity and functionality of the
things they design as well as feeling the need
to provide design solutions for alternative lifestyles.
They both believe in the concept of 'design for
everyone'.
Starck
has an interesting, eclectic style. He first started
designing furniture and household objects in the
hope of reaching a wider, international audience.
He started off his career as an interior decorator,
working on the homes of VIPs such as François
Mitterand. He soon began designing buildings,
Café Costes in Paris is among his early
work, as well as everyday objects such as toothbrushes
and juicers. His latest projects include "Le Bon"
a chain of 16 restaurants where the 52-year-old
designer hopes to convert the food-loving French
to the pleasures of simple, healthy eating in
comfortable, airy surrounds.
He
lives between hide-outs in France, the Balearic
Isles and New York and is firmly convinced of
the lack of physical barriers in the world where
we live. In a recent interview with TG3 Europa
he said: "Nowadays we live in a series
of parallel worlds. We can no longer divide the
world into geographical areas but rather groups.
Europe is, and should be considered as, the sum
of a number of differences. We still feel a tie
to our native countries but our heads are up there
in the stars." So, with cultures coming
together and distances shortening design is no
longer the prerogative of a privileged few. Indeed
Starck won't entertain talk of 'beauty' or what
is traditionally though of as beautiful.

The exhibition is running until March 17
2001.
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If you wander through the "dadriade" showroom,
even those of you who are less familiar with the
history of design will undoubtedly recognise some
of the seminal pieces of Starck's work with Driade:
the three-legged "Costes" armchair
– a harmonious blend of wood, leather and stainless
steel - which was designed for the Parisian café
of the same name; the "Royalton"
range of padded furniture from the early 1990s which
includes a magnificent bed complete with built-in
reading lamp and bud vase; the kitchen series "Neoz"
with its contrasts of stainless steel and varnished
mahogany; the futuristic polypropene block tables
and chairs and the acclaimed "paravent de
l’autre", a screen, designed in 1991, made
up of three panels where you can display your favourite
photographs: both functional and outward-looking
in true Starck style.
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