Alessi La Stanza Dello Scirocco Clock
  • Alessi La Stanza Dello Scirocco Clock
  • Alessi La Stanza Dello Scirocco Clock
  • Alessi La Stanza Dello Scirocco Clock

Alessi La Stanza Dello Scirocco Clock

€144.63
Availability if not in stock approximate 2 weeks
Color: *
  • Black
  • Stainless Steel
Shipping Costs
€53.50
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La Stanza dello Scirocco is a magical place found in the grand old houses in the Sicilian countryside, a place where people take shelter as they wait for the wind to calm down.

Sicilian architect Mario Trimarchi took inspiration from this childhood memory to design a clock.

The irregular shapes of the hexagonal clock face and the surrounding tiles create spaces and generate light and shade effects that add magic and dynamism to the object.

It comes in three versions: in stainless steel with mirrored finish, and painted in black or white epoxy resin.

Specifications

Stainless steel

Size Description

46,0 x cm 33,5cm

  • Mario Trimarchi

    Mario Trimarchi, born in Sicily, has lived and worked in Milan since 1983. An architect of the “freehand” generation, he has always moved freely within the visual universe and considers drawing, photography, design and image as equal components with the same theoretical approach. Between 1994 and 1998 Trimarchi was Director of Advanced Design at the Domus Academy and from 1989 to 2000 was part of the Olivetti Design Studio, where he worked with Michele De Lucchi. In 1999 he founded his own Corporate Identity Care studio, FRAGILE. With FRAGILE he designs systems of identity, coordinated image and visual alphabets through which diverse individualities can be expressed. He has designed many trademarks, most notably for Poste Italiane, the graphics for numerous large exhibitions, communications systems for Italian design companies and, finally, many displays and interiors. Never relinquishing his passion for drawing, architecture or design, he is currently working on the theme of unstable geometries, which he utilises within the context of our relationships with everyday objects in an attempt to change, however slightly, our habitual patterns of living.
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