Evento Wellmade
BIO

A Milan-based art and design historian and critic, Anty Pansera is the author of studies on industrial design and applied decorative arts. She is a member and co-founder, as well as chairwoman, of the “DcomeDesign” (D for Design) association, a professor at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts and past President of ISIA-Facoltà del design (Design Faculty) in Faenza, in the Board of the Design History Foundation and in the Cultural Committee of the Design Museum of the Milan Triennale Foundation.

Palermo

Roberto Intorre

Unique pieces of artisanal jewellery

His jewels are handmade unique pieces, designed to be in harmony with the person who wears them. Despite being very personal, they keep telling ...

His jewels are handmade unique pieces, designed to be in harmony with the person who wears them. Despite being very personal, they keep telling universal stories, representing a land that is the centre of the world: Sicily.

Monza

Francesca Fossati

Contemporary design and craftsmanship

Entrepreneur, gallerist and fashion designer: Francesca Fossati has undertaken a hard, yet very current path, based on the intersection between ...

Entrepreneur, gallerist and fashion designer: Francesca Fossati has undertaken a hard, yet very current path, based on the intersection between tailoring project and the enhancement of Italian artisanal expertise. Her clothes are unique, exclusive and never replicable: they demonstrate and show the recent revival of haute couture, where the details make each item very personal.

Milano

De Vecchi 1935

Unexpected Objects

The Renaissance-like workshop atmosphere you could breathe in while walking along the Navigli is gone: but the innovative pieces realised since ...

The Renaissance-like workshop atmosphere you could breathe in while walking along the Navigli is gone: but the innovative pieces realised since the 1930s by master silversmith Pierino De Vecchi are still alive in the “quadrilatero”, Milan’s Fashion District. We still find his T8 candlestick/centrepiece (dated 1947, according to the 8th Triennale), one single element flexuously snaking into space. But also the unexpected objects created by his son Gabriele, who, starting in the Sixties, and pursuing multi-sensory effects, has revisited the art of pouring with his gurgling Slow Drink jugs.