POLICROMA
Policroma: note sulla collezione | Policroma: notes on the collection
just as it was for Scarpa), and evoking the centuries-old marble-imitating
scagliola plasterwork with a contemporary formula.
The types of marble chosen are central to the project’s character.
Verde Alpi, a favourite with Gio Ponti and often found in Milan entrance
halls, features tightly packed patterning. Breccia Capraia, still found in a
very few places in Tuscany, has a white background with just a few veins.
Cipollino, in the special Ondulato variety in green and red, is patterned
with spirals. Rosa Valtoce, on the other hand, was used by the “Veneranda
Fabbrica” guild to build Milan Cathedral. It is an iconic stone with dramatic
stripes, popular in the past; it is now sourced from one very small quarry
in Piedmont which has been virtually abandoned.
The many different elements that make up the Policroma collection
all reflect the importance of craftsmanship to Cristina Celestino’s design
style: the modules can be freely mixed and combined, for example to
create a concave or convex semicircle, or for the large-scale replication of
small features initially conceived as trims, functional details transformed
into a dominant motif.
There is a return to the theme of the interior, a large or small
protected space, conceived as suspended in space and time yet also
reassuring and protective. It is designed through its coverings in a stark
yet not minimalist way, with intelligence and with no overreaching artistic
ambitions. An understated space and an extremely stylish declaration.
In Milan style, of course.
60 | 61