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16 Pesci

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16 Pesci by Enzo Mari
By Enzo Mari
Located in Chicago, IL
Enzo Mari 16 Pesci Italy, 1973 Manufactured by Danese polyurethane made to look like wood
Category

Vintage 1970s Italian Sculptures

16 Pesci by Enzo Mari
16 Pesci by Enzo Mari
H 0.75 in W 13.75 in D 9.75 in
Danese Milano 16 Pesci Toys in Solid Oak Wood by Enzo Mari
By Danese Milano, Enzo Mari
Located in Hicksville, NY
16 Pesci is a wooden puzzle, cleverly designed to produce 16 different fish shapes, with just one
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Italian Modern Toys

Materials

Oak

Wooden Puzzle 16 Pesci by Enzo Mari - Limited Edition
By Enzo Mari
Located in Pasadena, CA
Discover the timeless elegance of 16 Pesci, the iconic wooden puzzle designed by Enzo Mari in 1977
Category

Vintage 1970s Italian Desk Sets

Materials

Wood

Enzo Mari 16 Pesci Sealife Puzzle for Danese
Located in Miami, FL
Milan firm Danese. He did this game puzzle of 16 pesci or fish and another of animals. Made of
Category

Vintage 1970s Italian Toys and Dolls

Enzo Mari 16 Pesci Sealife Puzzle for Danese
Enzo Mari 16 Pesci Sealife Puzzle for Danese
H 1.19 in W 13.39 in D 9.85 in
Enzo Mari 16 Pesci Puzzle for Danese Milano - 1st Edition - Midcentury Modern
By Danese Milano, Enzo Mari
Located in Decatur, GA
Enzo Mari 16 Pesci resin puzzle for Danese Milano, circa 1970's. Original production - later
Category

Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Animal Sculptures

Materials

Resin

16 Pesci by Enzo Mari for Danese, Original Edition
By Danese Milano, Enzo Mari
Located in Dronten, NL
First 1970s edition, polyurethane made to look like wood, made in 1973 by Danese. Marked Danese Milano Made in Italy on one of the pieces.
Category

Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Animal Sculptures

Materials

Resin

Enzo Mari for Danese Wood Puzzle
By Danese Milano, Enzo Mari
Located in Los Angeles, CA
resemble wood. The title is "16 pesci" or 16 fish. The box does show signs of wear but the puzzle itself is
Category

Vintage 1950s Italian Mid-Century Modern Games

Enzo Mari for Danese Wood Puzzle
Enzo Mari for Danese Wood Puzzle
H 1.5 in W 14 in D 10 in
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Enzo Mari for sale on 1stDibs

Enzo Mari was an influential industrial designer and a beloved curmudgeon who revered Marxism. His vintage mid-century modern designs are simple, functional and poetic. Widely known Mari-designed objects include desk accessories, such as the Formosa perpetual wall calendar, vases, cocktail tables and chandeliers

Enzo Mari's work is embedded within the city of Milan, the Italian capital of all things design. In fact, the traffic bollards he devised are part of the city itself: Shaped like "panettone" cakes, they simultaneously direct traffic and provide seating for pedestrians.

In 1974, Mari published Autoprogettazione? (roughly translated as self-design), a Marx-inspired, anti-industrial, do-it-yourself handbook for the everyday person to use to build furniture without the assistance of a glitzy designer or knowledge of complex joinery. Mari’s intent with the publication was to remove the alienation of the creator and manufacturer from the end product by teaching anyone to develop a critical eye for production.

Artek relaunched kits based on the blueprints in the manual in an exhibition at Spazio Rossana Orlandi in 2010. The subsequent collectability of his work was reportedly irksome for Mari because he abhorred the industrial production for which he was becoming known.

Mari’s meager upbringing heavily influenced his politics, and even in childhood, he would come up with ingenious ways to support the family financially. As a designer, the desire to envision and build significant pieces was more important to Mari than devising new marketing and retail sales tactics. He optimistically believed objects could change the world. This view went against the rising consumer mania for every next trend that surfaced in the late 20th century. Not surprisingly, his ecological and economical stance led him to produce fewer objects.

Mari's philosophy did not stop people from desiring his creations, nor prevent other designers from wanting to collaborate with him. Following World War II, he worked for companies like Danese, Olivetti, Artemide, Driade and Alessi, who brought his prodigious designs to the public, and Mari’s work was widely celebrated. 

The Golden Compass, Italy's highest honor for industrial design, was awarded to Mari four times before he died from COVID in 2020, and New York’s Museum of Modern Art has a permanent collection of his objects on display.

On 1stDibs, find a collection of Enzo Mari decorative objects, folk art and serveware.