Clino Castelli

Clino Trini Castelli (born Civitavecchia, 1944) is an Italian industrial designer and artist.[1][2] He has used the concept of "noform"[3] through his work in environmental and industrial design, developed through the application of tools such as Design Primario and CMF design.[4]

Career

Having obtained his school leaving certificate at the Scuola Centrale Allievi Fiat in Turin, in 1961 Castelli started working at the Centro Stile of Fiat Automobiles, and after three years moved to Olivetti[5] in Milan, in the studio of Ettore Sottsass.[6] At the same time he was part of the growing Arte Povera movement in Turin, comparing himself with artists like Michelangelo Pistoletto,[6] Piero Gilardi and Alighiero Boetti. In Milan he worked in fashion, meeting Nanni Strada[7] and Elio Fiorucci.[7] With the latter in 1967 he founded the Intrapresa Design[7] company. From 1969 to 1973 he devised the Red Books, the first manuals developed in the metaproject format, which led to the creation of Olivetti's corporate identity programme. In 1973 with Andrea Branzi and Massimo Morozzi, he created the Centro Design Montefibre; with the same partners a year later he started the CDM (Consulenti Design Milano) company, which became Castelli Design[8] in 1983. In 1978 he founded the Colorterminal IVI di Milano, the first centre to use the new RGB technologies and CMF design, and four years later formed the Gruppo Colorscape for urban planning. Throughout the 1980s he worked with Louis Vuitton and Vitra in Europe, Herman Miller in the United States and Mitsubishi in Japan. During this period he re-established his partnership with Fiat, which led to the creation in 1985 of the Centro di Qualistica Fiat, the "Qualistic Compendium" programme with Olivetti and CMF product range planning with Cassina. At the same time he was one of the first in Europe to look at the concept of domotics, or home automation, developed with Bticino, Legrand and Somfy. During the 1990s he started new design ventures in Japan with Hitachi, Toli and Itoki.[9] In parallel with this, he taught design at the Politecnico di Milano and the Domus Academy, of which he was one of the founders in 1983. From 1994 to 2005 he wrote articles on design culture for the magazine Interni. In 2000 he founded the Qualistic Lab, a division of Castelli Design that developed new instruments for the emotional positioning of images and products.

Awards

Writings

Bibliography

References

  1. http://www.castellidesign.it/hall/pdf/CV_Castelli_medium_EN.pdf
  2. "Castelli Designport – Hall". castellidesign.it.
  3. Guido Musante, Mater Materia 2, on: Interni n. 649, Milan: Mondadori, 2015, pp. 62–65
  4. "D. Donegani, E. Pacenti (edited by), Lost in Translation, Domus Academy, 2012".
  5. Marco Vinelli, Ma la bella «sessantottina» non stregò. Ettore Sottsass e la Valentine, Uomini&Oggetti, Corriere della Sera, 15 giugno 2013, pag. 43
  6. 1 2 Romy Golan, [http://www.academia.edu/7194890/Flashbacks_and_Eclipses_in _Italian_Art_in_the_1960s Flashbacks and Eclipses in Italian Art in the 1960s], in Grey Room, MIT Press Journal, Fall 2012, No. 49, pp. 102–127
  7. 1 2 3 Paola Colaiacomo (a cura di), Fatto in Italia: la cultura del made in Italy (1960–2000), Meltemi editore, Roma, 2006, p. 54
  8. Official Website Castelli Design www.castellidesign.com
  9. "ITOKI's History – Corporate info – English – itoki". itoki.jp.
  10. "Enterprise Server EP8000 Series | Server | Beitragsdetails | iF ONLINE EXHIBITION". exhibition.ifdesign.de. Retrieved 2015-04-02.
  11. "Hitachi Virtual Storage Platform | Disk array system | Beitragsdetails | iF ONLINE EXHIBITION". exhibition.ifdesign.de. Retrieved 2015-04-02.
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