Memphis Milano

Fortune Table by Michele De Lucchi

Regular price
10-16 Weeks

Architectural design, basic forms and unexpected lines that offer a glimpse of a disruptive force pushing on the glass. These are the ingredients that make Fortune by Michele De Lucchi an iconic Memphis masterpiece. The striking feature of Fortune are the “legs” in tones of green and blue: the top of the table, namely its most “functional” part, seems to vanish due to the transparency of the glass.

Table with tempered glass top, wooden legs covered with decorative laminate, lacquered elements.

Designed in 1982.

70.9" x 31.5" x 28.7"

Table with tempered glass top, wooden legs covered with decorative laminate, lacquered elements.

Italy

Michele De Lucchi is an Italian designer and architect. In 1975 he graduated in Architecture at the University of Florence, where from 1975 to 1977 he worked as an assistant to Adolfo Natalini, founder of Superstudio. Between the end of the 70s and the 80s he was a prominent figure in Architettura Radicale and played a part in the most important movements in Italian design of the time.

His important track record with Centrokappa and Alchimia in those years is also worthy of mention. He was one of the co-founders of Memphis with which he collaborated from 1981 to 1987. In 1987 he designed the Tolomeo lamp for Artemide, which earned him the Compasso d'Oro two years later. Working for Olivetti, De Lucchi acquired enormous experience in the world of the office, creating a vast range of furniture, computers and furnishings such as the highly modular Icarus Series (for Olivetti Synthesis in 1982, with Ettore Sottsass). De Lucchi’s projects are created in collaboration with numerous Italian and European furniture brands. In 1990 he founded Produzione Privata with the aim of combining an experimental approach with traditional artisanal techniques and processes.

He has curated numerous art and design exhibitions and has designed museum buildings such as the Milan Triennale, the Palazzo delle Esposizioni in Rome and the Neues Museum in Berlin. He has carried out various projects for the city of Milan including the pavilions for Expo 2015, the UniCredit Pavilion in Piazza Gae Aulenti and the installation of the Pietà Rondanini in the Castello Sforzesco. He is a professor with the Faculty of Design of the Milan Polytechnic and a member of the Accademia Nazionale di San Luca in Rome.

Condition: New