Angelo Mangiarotti "Vesuvio" Ceramic Vase for Gabbianelli
About the Item
- Creator:Angelo Mangiarotti (Designer),Gabbianelli (Manufacturer)
- Dimensions:Height: 9.5 in (24.13 cm)Diameter: 19 in (48.26 cm)
- Style:Mid-Century Modern (Of the Period)
- Materials and Techniques:Ceramic,Glazed
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:circa 1960s
- Condition:Wear consistent with age and use. Very good vintage condition. No chips, cracks or repairs. A couple of inherent glaze pops. Additional photos upon request.
- Seller Location:Chicago, IL
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU1543232566242
Angelo Mangiarotti
Italian architect, designer, teacher and urban planner Angelo Mangiarotti was a leading light in the international design community from the 1960s onward. While he was an adherent of the rationalist principles of purity of line and simplicity of construction, he sought to imbue his designs with a sense of character and lightness of spirit that was often lacking in late-20th-century modernist architecture and design.
Born in Milan, Mangiarotti studied architecture at Milan Polytechnic, graduating in 1948. Five years later, he won a visiting professorship at the Illinois Institute of Technology — beginning a peripatetic academic career that would see him teaching in numerous Italian institutions as well as in schools as far afield as Hawaii and Australia. He worked with Bauhaus eminences Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and met such greats as Frank Lloyd Wright and Walter Gropius. He returned to Italy in 1955 and would go on to work on numerous industrial, residential, commercial and civic projects in his home country, most notably a group of six railway stations in Milan.
As a designer, Mangiarotti and the development of his career embodies the evolution of modernism in the latter decades of the 20th century. In the late 1950s and early ’60s, after early experiments in plywood furniture and one-piece foam-core seating — including the 1110 lounge chair for Cassina — Mangiarotti began to design using more classic materials, from delicate, curvaceous blown-glass table lamps for Artemide to chandeliers with crystal links for Vistosi. In 1971, Mangiarotti introduced what became his signature designs: a series of tables in marble and other stones that featured “gravity joints,” their legs held in place by the weight of the tabletop. Tables in his Eros collection (1971) have muscular proportions that anticipate the robust, overscaled lines of postmodern works that would appear 10 years later: His Eccentrico table, for example, is a striking assemblage in marble featuring a top that is cantilevered dramatically on a canted columnar base.
But simplicity and practicality were consistently the primary watchwords of Mangiarotti’s designs. The purity and elegance of the objects he created offer a graceful counterpoint to a traditional decor, yet they have a singular sculptural presence that allows them to stand out powerfully in a modern interior.
- ShippingRetrieving quote...Ships From: Chicago, IL
- Return PolicyThis item cannot be returned.
- Johanne Gerber Baca Fajance Series Vase for Royal CopenhagenBy Royal Copenhagen, Johanne GerberLocated in Chicago, ILBehold this distinguished Danish midcentury "Baca" series vase designed by Johanne Gerber for Royal Copenhagen Denmark in the 1960s.. The vase stands tall, its rectangular form with...Category
Vintage 1960s Danish Mid-Century Modern Vases
MaterialsCeramic
- Woodfired Studio Pottery Vessel with Three Handles by Gillan DotyLocated in Chicago, ILA beautiful woodfired studio pottery vase by a North Carolina artisan, circa 2020. Hand thrown stoneware vessel / amphora with three handles. Woodfired f...Category
2010s American Modern Vases
MaterialsStoneware, Pottery
- Set of Nanni Valentini Ceramic Sphere Boxes for Ceramica ArcoreBy Ceramica Arcore, Nanni ValentiniLocated in Chicago, ILSet of two incredible Nanni Valenti ceramic sphere shaped boxes for Ceramica Arcore, Italy circa 1960s. These two ceramic lidded boxes pair extremely w...Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Ceramics
MaterialsCeramic
- Set of 2 Lee Rosen Cerulean Blue Ceramic Low Bowl for Design TechnicsBy Lee Rosen, Design TechnicsLocated in Chicago, ILIntroducing a captivating set of two Modernist low bowls, designed by Lee Rosen for Design Technics in the spirited 1960s. These vide poche, or catchall bowls, are a sublime blend of...Category
Vintage 1960s American Mid-Century Modern Decorative Dishes and Vide-Poche
MaterialsPottery, Ceramic
- 1960s Textured Ceramic Table LampLocated in Chicago, ILThis stunning textured ceramic table lamp from the 1960s embodies the essence of mid-century modern design with its unique geometric shape ...Category
Vintage 1960s American Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
MaterialsCeramic
- Clyde Burt Large Ceramic Charger / PlateBy Clyde BurtLocated in Chicago, ILA large Clyde Burt (Ohio, 1922-1981) ceramic charger / plate, circa 1960s. This glazed stoneware charger features a sgraffito abstract design in dark brown on a beige / tan background. Dark brown glazed rim. CB inscribed signature to underside. Measures 1.25" Height x 15.5" Diameter. Excellent condition with no chips, cracks or repairs. Born in Melrose, Ohio in 1922, Clyde Burt would go on to become a major voice in American studio ceramics. He studied at Fort Wayne Art School and later at the Cape Cod School of Art before landing at the Cranbrook Academy of Art to study under Maija Grotell. While Grotell is responsible for bringing the wheel to Cranbrook, Burt made it central to his practice and his thrown works express the same endless curiosity as his teacher. Upon returning to Ohio, Burt built a home studio on his family’s farmland near the Little Auglaize River and harvested rich clay from the surrounding area. He started every day at 5:30 in the morning and would work until he knew he “had enough”. Constantly experimenting with glazes, colors and surface decoration, Burt painstakingly recorded his successes and failures in a small notebook...Category
Vintage 1960s American Mid-Century Modern Decorative Dishes and Vide-Poche
MaterialsStoneware, Pottery
- 20th Century Angelo Mangiarotti Ceramic Vase Mod. Vesuvio for Gabbianelli '70By Gabbianelli, Angelo MangiarottiLocated in Turin, TurinMinimal and beautiful centerpiece designed by the Italian master Angelo Mangiarotti. The vase was designed at the end in '70s for Gabbianelli and it is entirely in enameled ceramic. ...Category
Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Centerpieces
MaterialsCeramic
- Multifaced Ceramic Vase by Angelo Mangiarotti for BrambillaBy Angelo Mangiarotti, Fratelli BrambillaLocated in Barcelona, ESMultifaced vase designed in 1968 by Angelo Mangiarotti for Brambilla Ceramiche, Italy. Glazed ceramic in different tones. Labelled.Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Vases
MaterialsCeramic
- Angelo Mangiarotti Vase for KnollBy Angelo MangiarottiLocated in Greensboro, NCIconic Knoll marble vase designed by Angelo Mangiarotti. This vessel came from the estate of the Director of the Boston Knoll showroom in the 1960s/70s.Category
Vintage 1960s Mid-Century Modern Vases
MaterialsMarble
- Angelo Mangiarotti Vase for KnollBy Knoll, Angelo MangiarottiLocated in Chicago, ILAngelo Mangiarotti Vase for Knoll, Light Grey Marble with Dark Grey veining. [Stamped underside Made in Italy]Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Vases
MaterialsMarble
- Angelo Mangiarotti Indigo Ceramic Vase, 1960By Angelo Mangiarotti, Fratelli BrambillaLocated in Brussels, BEFratelli Brambilla is the manufacture which produced the vase designed by Angelo Mangiarotti in the 1960s. The shape is irregular, free. See mark and old sticker.Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Vases
MaterialsCeramic
- Angelo Mangiarotti White Ceramic Vase, 1960sBy Angelo Mangiarotti, Fratelli BrambillaLocated in Brussels, BEFratelli Brambilla is the manufacture which produced the vase designed by Angelo Mangiarotti in the 1960s. Old sticker of Frattelli Brambilla is there but not holding .The mark is ap...Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Vases
MaterialsCeramic