THE STORY OF FABIO NOVEMBRE

THE STORY OF FABIO NOVEMBRE

Today I want to tell you the story of a great architect and designer of our country.


He is Fabio Novembre, born in Lecce in 1966 and a great lover of Italy and its magnificent places and landscapes.
He studied and graduated in architecture in Milan, then moved to New York, where he attended a course in film directing.

His first interior design work was commissioned in 1994: it was the Anna Molinari Bluemarine store in London.
From that moment onwards, a period of long ascent began for the designer, who in the following years began to collaborate with very important brands, including Cappellini, Driade, Meritalia, Flaminia and Casamania.


He realizes several design pieces, many of which are linked to the physiognomy of man, to the concept of the person and its forms. In fact Novembre makes the human body into real sculptures, and with bodies he creates objects to house other bodies.

From the famous Nemo seat for Driade, to the Him & Her chair for Casamania, to the Murana vase for Venini, the face and body of people always outline the figures of these objects, making them almost animated and ready to dialogue with us and welcome us.


In addition to this, he loves to be inspired by nature and the force that drives it; a clear example is the Trulli series for Kartell, which is clearly inspired by the town of Alberobello he loves so much, and which proposes the essence of this magical place in some small objects.


Some people like to call him “pop”, he defines himself rather “close to people’s dreams”. He likes to be able to arouse emotions and give his works a perfect mix of elegance and originality.

In short, a visionary designer, fashionable and in step with the times, who knows how to capture the beauty of nature and human beings and who knows how to convey it in the best way in all the works he does. In short, a unique artist.

And

CURIOSITY:

In one of his quotes he says, “Life is a source of continuous inspiration, with curiosity as the guiding spirit and concentration as the focus.”

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