The exhibition Tomaso Buzzi at Venini, curated by Marino Barovier, opens to the public on September 14th, 2014, on the Island of San Giorgio Maggiore in Venice. It is the third exhibition dedicated to the history of the Venini glassware company organized by Le Stanze del Vetro, a long-term cultural initiative launched by Fondazione Giorgio Cini and Pentagram Stiftung, devoted to the study and the promotion of the art of glassmaking in the 20th and 21st centuries.

The Milanese Architect Tomaso Buzzi (1900-1981) was a lively protagonist of the so-called “Novecento Milanese”.

He was friend with Gio Ponti – with whom he collaborated – and partner of "Il Labirinto" – a group that included architects and entrepreneurs such as Gio Ponti, Michele Marelli and Paolo Venini – aiming at “promoting the modern decorative arts in today’s households”.

Together with Gio Ponti, Tomaso Buzzi became one of the most important creators of the Italian gusto of the 1930s, for the elegance and refinement that he brought to the applied arts. A cultured architect, a curious designer, a sophisticated interior designer, as well as a collaborator of the magazine Domus, he worked with the greatest personalities in the Italian upper middle class: Volpi, Cini, Visconti, among many others.

Between 1932 and 1933 Tomaso Buzzi began his collaboration with the Venini glassware company, which would continue, albeit episodically, in later years. Buzzi’s creative contribution was characterised by experimentation with both materials and forms. Indeed, his broad research included lighting designs, thereby helping to reveal a new facet of Murano’s traditional glass craftsmanship.

When Buzzi arrived at the Venini company in Murano, in 1932, he brought with him a remarkable cultural baggage and a thorough knowledge of ancient art, in particular of the Etruscan period, which particularly fascinated him.

As a matter of fact, one of Buzzi’s sources of inspiration for his designs was the askò, a type of ceramic vase of Greek origin widely found in the Etruscan area, with one or two mouths at either end of the vase. It was used to contain oily liquids, and often modelled to represent winged or horned animal figures. It is not a coincidence that in the 1920s Etruscan art was subject to rediscovery and in-depth analysis: it is from here that Buzzi sought inspiration, with the aim of creating new and original artefacts, which on the one hand did not deny their historical inspiration, yet on the other exalted the plastic characteristics of glass.

This happened through the experimentation with a new glass material, the so called “vetro incamiciato”, with several layers of color and gold leaf, and the use of animal-shaped details (such as snails, heads of horses and goats) or of intricate necklaces, knotted ribbons and handles in the shape of stylised helmets. Among the most significant objects exhibited at the 5th Triennale of Milan was the well-known “Coppa delle Mani”, a bowl supported by two hands with joined wrists and tapered fingers, and decorated with bracelets and rings.

The new technique, invented by Buzzi, radically changed the appearance of the glass produced at Venini, contributing to the need for innovation of the Murano-based glassware company, and re-asserting its vocation for producing elegant and refined glass. Thanks to the analysis and research of the drawings preserved at the Venini archive, it appears that Buzzi studied 14 different techniques for the production of the multi-layered “vetri incamiciati”, that can be compared to the glazes techniques in painting. The architect used several layers of color to obtain different shades of pink, green, blue-grey, and red-pink, that lead to the “laguna” [lagoon], “alga”[alga], “alba” [dawn] and “tramonto” [sunset] glass series. “This technique”, according to the curator Marino Barovier, “enabled him to produce unusual tones, rich in shades and intensity, and a material that reacted to the variation in light, in relation with the shape and the thickness obtained by the blowing technique. This procedure did not allow for the material to be easily reproduced and thus contributed to the uniqueness and originality of the final object”.

The exhibition Tomaso Buzzi at Venini, curated by Marino Barovier, retraces this brief but fruitful collaboration, documented not only through the selected works (approximately 200) and the original drawings preserved in the Venini archive, but also through an unprecedented collection of drawings preserved at the Scarzuola in Montegabbione (near Terni), the theatre-city that Buzzi designed around a monastery and XIIIth-century church at the end of the 1960s as his own house, and continued to work on until his death in 1981.

On the occasion of the exhibition, Skira will publish the first complete “catalogue raisonné” of Tomaso Buzzi’s glass work, edited by Marino Barovier with Carla Sonego.

Furthermore, for this third exhibition dedicated to the Venini glassware company, film director Gian Luigi Calderone has made a documentary film entitled: “Tomaso Buzzi. Le memorie dell’Angelo Custode”, which tells the story of the Milanese architect through the unpublished notes that Buzzi was planning to use in preparation for an unusual form of autobiography, one that was to be narrated from the point of view of his guardian angel. Buzzi’s voice is that of Roberto Hertzliska.

In conjunction with the exhibition Tomaso Buzzi at Venini, the temporary pavilion designed by Hiroshi Sugimoto will remain open to the public: “Glass Tea House Mondrian” is the first architectural project by Hiroshi Sugimoto in Venice.

Tomaso Buzzi. Born in Sondrio on September 30th, 1900, he graduated from the Politecnico of Milan in 1923. Following an initial and fundamental phase linked to his collaboration with Gio Ponti in the field of interior design, in a style that in no way resembles either the Art Deco flavour or the heavy 20th century fashion, in 1927, he founded the association “Il Labirinto” with Lancia, Marelli, Venini, Chiesa and Ponti. In 1928 he started collaborating with Domus magazine, and between 1932 and 1934 he actively worked at Venini. Animated by the motto “an architect is mostly an orchestra conductor”, starting in 1934 he undertook the restoration of important houses: from Palladio’s Villa Maser in Treviso to the Papadopoli palace in Venice and the design of the grounds and some interiors at Villa Necchi Campiglio in Milan, between 1953 and 1956. Among his many designs, Palazzo Marcoli in Rome, Villa Pacelli in Forte dei Marmi, Villa Rossi of Montelera in St. Moritz, Villa Nasi Agnelli in Cap-Ferrat, Villa Putti in Bologna and the Teatro della Cometa in Rome should be mentioned. The restoration of the Italian Embassies in Tokyo and in Bangkok was also his. In 1956, following the advice of Marquess Paolo Misciatelli, he bought a monastery - with an annexed 13th-century church, founded by Saint Francis – in Montegabbione, near Terni, also known as “the Scarzuola”; it would be a continuing laboratory throughout the years, aimed at creating an ideal personal city. Buzzi died in Rapallo on February 16th, 1981. His ability to pass from one art to another, always adding his own contribution, made him into a true protagonist of the modern Italian gusto, and still an inspiration today.

Educational activities

The exhibition Tomaso Buzzi at Venini is open from September 14th, 2014 to January 11th, 2015 (free admission, closed on Wednesday). The free educational activities for students from primary to secondary school will continue during this exhibition, along with free guided tours and educational activities for families. More specifically the educational programs will include activities and workshops, during which teenagers and children will discover the history and the importance of the art of glassmaking in Venice, by producing artefacts and participating in laboratory activities and discussions.

In order to take part in the educational program it is necessary to book in advance by calling the toll-free number 800 662 477 (Monday to Friday, 10am – 5pm) or by sending an email to artsystem@artsystem.it. For detailed information on the many activities for different age groups please visit: www.artsystem.it

Le Stanze del Vetro

Isola di San Giorgio Maggiore
Venice 30124 Italy
Ph. +39 041 5230869
press@lestanzedelvetro.it
www.lestanzedelvetro.it

Opening hours

Thursday - Tuesday
From 10am to 7pm

Related images
  1. Large vases in glass consisting of different coloured layers with applied gold leaf. 1932-33
  2. Zoomorphic vase in the shape of a cow’s head in lattimo and straw-colour cased glass with applied tarnished silver leaf, 1932
  3. Large laguna glass vases consisting of different coloured layers with applied gold leaf. 1932-33
  4. Vase in turquoise cased glass with ovoid body of flattened section, small truncated cone-shaped foot. Vase in turquoise cased glass with truncated cone-shaped foot and high flared neck.Bowl in turquoise cased glass with truncated cone-shaped foot and black glass finishing. 1932
  5. Vase in black glass with wavy ‘collar’ in reticello (net-like) pattern with lattimo filigrana glass, 1933
  6. Ovoid vase in turquoise cased glass with small flared foot and mouth in black glass. Fruit bowl in turquoise cased glass with truncated cone-shaped foot in black glass. 1932