Today, this is to Rossella Colombari, the chic and dynamic dealer from Milan, whose gallery is considered the world’s most influential in historical Italian design. She has done more for uncovering the remarkable work of Italian architect and designer Carlo Mollino (1905-73) than anyone else.
Mollino began his career in the 30s, working at his father’s Turin-based architectural practice. Although trained as an architect, and came to produce several significant buildings, Mollino’s name has entered the celebrated pantheon of modern design with the extraordinary furniture, which he designed in the postwar years, and produced in local workshop in Turin. So personal, unique, surreal, avant-garde, and beautiful, that no other furniture can be compared to that created by Mollino.
It was forty years ago when Colombari, who comes from a dynasty of antique dealers in Turin had first
Colombari was able to trace the engineer who owned Mollino’s last studio, and to get access to the late architect’s documents; to locate the clients of the architect who at that time was recently deceased; to visit the handful homes he created for his special patrons; to rescue the furniture; to travel around the world, placing these pieces in some of the world’s most sophisticated homes. Rossella Colombari can be credited for establishing the market for Carlo Mollino. Let’s recognize her today.
All images courtesy Galleria Rossella Colombari.