La Smorfia
A sculptural modular seat, La Smorfia by Gaetano Pesce has the face of a woman screen‑printed on the back. The backrest is conceived as an independent part with respect to the tongue‑like stool, the armrests and the footrest. The tongue‑shaped seat is in foamed polyurethane, and the set combines armrests, stool and footrest into a playful “contemporary throne.”
Year
2003
Price Indication
On Request
Materials
Thermoformed Polyester With Polyurethane Foam And Plastic
Dimensions
W 90cm ( 35” )
H 110cm ( 43” )
D 71cm ( 28” )
H 110cm ( 43” )
D 71cm ( 28” )
Gaetano Pesce
Gaetano Pesce was born 1939 in La Spezia, and from the outset his life unfolded in parallel with the social and political transformations that would shape his thinking. Educated in Venice during the fervent intellectual climate of the 1960s, Pesce developed a conviction that design must reflect the complexity, instability, and plurality of contemporary life. He rejected the modernist pursuit of neutrality and perfection, arguing instead that objects should carry emotion, narrative, and even contradiction. For Pesce, design was never merely about function or style; it was a cultural act, inseparable from the values and tensions of its time.
Across architecture, furniture, and installation, Pesce forged a language that was unmistakably his own. He embraced industrial resins, foams, and plastics not as utilitarian shortcuts but as expressive tools capable of fluidity and spontaneity. His forms were often sensuous, asymmetrical, and saturated with color, deliberately resisting repetition. The celebrated UP5 / UP6 armchair stands as a defining example of his philosophy: a sculptural seat paired with a spherical ottoman, conceived as both domestic object and social commentary. In Pesce’s hands, furniture became a vehicle for political reflection and human symbolism, collapsing the boundary between art and utility. As a thinker and maker, Pesce championed individuality above all. He believed that variation was a fundamental expression of freedom, and he sought to embed that principle directly into production, ensuring that no two works were ever entirely identical.
Across architecture, furniture, and installation, Pesce forged a language that was unmistakably his own. He embraced industrial resins, foams, and plastics not as utilitarian shortcuts but as expressive tools capable of fluidity and spontaneity. His forms were often sensuous, asymmetrical, and saturated with color, deliberately resisting repetition. The celebrated UP5 / UP6 armchair stands as a defining example of his philosophy: a sculptural seat paired with a spherical ottoman, conceived as both domestic object and social commentary. In Pesce’s hands, furniture became a vehicle for political reflection and human symbolism, collapsing the boundary between art and utility. As a thinker and maker, Pesce championed individuality above all. He believed that variation was a fundamental expression of freedom, and he sought to embed that principle directly into production, ensuring that no two works were ever entirely identical.
Upcoming Exhibition
Vogue Living VL50
26 FEB 2026