Papavero L 759724 192x192 0751 papavero57r 1
Papavero L 1 759725 192x192 0751 papavero57r 2
Papavero L 2 759726 192x192 0751 papavero57r 3
Papavero L 3 759727 192x192 0751 papavero57r 4
Papavero L 4 759728 192x192 0751 papavero57r 5
Papavero L 5 759729 192x192 0751 papavero57r 6

Papavero L

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Decorative objects - design Gherardo Frassa

€ 138,00

Available

Poetic poppy shaped table object in steel or brass according to the finish with round irregular base. Two finishes, two different sizes. Signed under the base.
Papavero Delicato are flowers for all seasons, eternal because they are made of metal, but capable of keeping intact all their poetry. Miniature sculptures which inevitably attracts the look, given a colour touch to all those spaces, whether professional or private, where they will always be alive and sparkling.

Code: PAPAVERO57R
Dimension: cm 9x9, h 57
Material: base and steem in stainless steel. Steel flower.
Finish: red
Weight: kg 1
Volume: m3 0,009
Note: being hand-crafted every piece is unique

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Gherardo Frassa
Designer

Gherardo Frassa

Born in the Valle dei Camuni, the valley of graffiti and iron, he soon starts to travel: to Milan, London and Paris, followed by 7 years on-the-road in the United States. He finally returns to Milan where he opens the shop “Balocchi e profumi” which invites to breathe in the air of novelty that is a distinctive feature of his discoveries.

To become acquainted with Gherardo Frassa, who passed away prematurely in June 2014, it is sufficient to say that he used to call himself an “eventologist” and that he spent his life between art, artisan work, fashion and design. Exhibitions, books, pieces of art, objects, cultural tributes, research, reconstruction, commercial initiatives: he dedicated his life to a myriad of different activities, always with his signature ant-conformist attitude, a love for the unusual (especially if backed by intelligence and history), an obsessive care for detail which he associated to an overflowing irony and joyful modesty.

His love for graffiti, iron and details find their utmost expression in the “disguise” that he possibly loved most and to which he dedicated his later years. The tin flower gardener, the inventor of those tiny sculptures, made entirely in tin, hand painted and depicting imaginative flowers of the strangest shapes, inspired by the original pictures of the futurist Osvaldo Bot and his “Futurist Mechanical Flora”.