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Designer Alberto Biagetti and artist Laura Baldassari are the core of Atelier Biagetti, the Italian design studio based in Milan that creates design objects, interiors and installations. Atelier Biagetti’s furniture and objects are a constant exploration of the complexities of design today: relationships between traditional culture and contemporary expectations, craft and experimental techniques, utility and aesthetics.

The Atelier has designed for many established Italian brands such as Memphis-Post Design, Venini, Zerodisegno and De Vecchi 1935, as well as producing its own collections and limited edition pieces for galleries and private clients around the world.

Address
Piazza Arcole, 4
Zipcode
20143 Milan
Qualifications

Atelier Biagetti has designed interiors and installations such as the Venini flagship store in Via Montenapoleone Milan, Yoox Group’s headquarters in Milan and Bologna, the IED Foundation in Cagliari, exhibitions in the Triennale di Milano and installations in public spaces such as the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele and the Università Statale in Milan and on Broadway in New York.

Services Provided
Atelier Biagetti works closely with both private and public clients to design “taylor-made” design objects, interiors and installation concepts for residential environments, commercial spaces and exhibitions. In all of its installation projects Atelier Biagetti strives to create stimulating and decisive environments often rejecting convention and shattering preconceptions. The Atelier directs the whole design and production process from concept and art direction to installation. Atelier Biagetti prides itself on putting together the best team to suit each project’s requirements, sourced from a wide network of suppliers, specialists and partner companies.
Areas Served

Worldwide

Venini Flagship Store

Shops

Venini Flagship Store in Milan

A place where hardness and fragility are one and the same, every object is a sign, a fossil, a fresco, a multi-coloured diamond, a fragment that entwines past and future. The space is theatrical and is created using minimal marks and tactile surfaces that, like a skin, envelope the interior, revealing only in parts the soul of the furnace.

Photography
Jonathan Frantini

Photos
Atelier Biagetti