THE TWENTIES: THE CLASSICAL CONVERSATION

 

Gio Ponti was an architect who started out with ceramics. It should be said straightaway: being an architect was not one aspect of his versatility, versatility was one aspect of his being an architect, owing to the all-encompassing sense that he gave to architecture: in each different thing there is always the same process and the same hand…Right from the start, he got involved in both design and promotion. He was not afraid of luxury or of mass production. For quality lies in form, and it can be spread around. Indeed, it has to be. And at once. These were the roots of both his enthusiasm and his detachment.

This can be seen in his first major assignment: from 1923 to 1930 the young Ponti was art director of the Richard-Ginori factory, and he made a complete change in its output. The famous Grand Pieces, as well as the minor ones, of the Ponti period at Richard-Ginori were all inspired by the idea of quality in industrial production. Industry is the style of the 20th century, its mode of creation… wrote Ponti in the catalogue of the Paris Expo, 1925, where his porcelain won the Grand Prix.

Thus the luxury furniture that Ponti designed in these years was paralleled by his low-cost furniture for the department store La Rinascente, the «Domus Nova series, 1927. And he would show both kinds (his own pieces and those of other designers) at the great exhibitions of the time the Venice Biennale and Triennale in Monza. Industry, mass production, distribution, advertising, exhibitions, magazines. An exciting sequence, at that time. Ponti brought the art industries into contact with each other (Christofle with Venini). He got architects and manufacturers to go into partnership (in il Labirinto,1927). He presented designers and designs in the exhibitions he staged. He published them in the magazine he founded. The magazine was Domus. It was born, in 1928, at the suggestion of the great journalist Ugo Ojetti, the Florentine patron of the young Ponti in those years. Later they would courteously drift apart. It was set up almost as a joke, as a Milanese improvisation; and was to remain such. It was, at the outset, a vehicle for Italian neoclassical domestic culture, and Ponti used it to fight his battles: almost won, against the fake antique and still to be won, against the ugly modern. The publisher was Gianni Mazzocchi, even younger than Ponti - they were to work together for years.

Ponti met the applied arts first, before architecture. His first house in Milan, the one on Via Randaccio, dates from 1925. It was immediately followed by his first construction abroad, the Villa Bouilhet at Garches, Paris. They are his two most typical works of architecture: the roots of their design are neoclassical, their layout innovative. We say neoclassical today. Ponti would say of classical inspiration, owing to the enormous impression made on me by living, while resting from the front during the war, in buildings by Palladio, and seeing as many of them as I could. It was a non-programmatic starting point which was never to disappear, even though the forms did vanish. During these years, from 1926 to 1933, Ponti was in partnership with the architect Emilio Lancia.

From "Gio Ponti, l'opera" by Lisa Licitra Ponti,1990, Leonardo Editore

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  2. Quando la Richard-Ginori vince a Parigi il Grand Prix alla Expo del 1925 (Exposition International des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes), il giovane Ponti è direttore artistico da due anni e ha rivoluzionato l'inte­ra produzione. (Ci sono, a questa Expo, due punti lumi­nosi italiani: la saletta neoclassica di Ponti e la sala futu­rista di Prampolini: colpiscono la critica francese, e si ignorano fra loro.) Il periodo Ponti ha un duplice valore, nella storia mo­derna della Richard-Ginori. Alla Manifattura Richard-Ginori di Doccia, Ponti non solo inventa e disegna (per le mani abili di allora) i famosi Grandi Pezzi d'Arte De­stinati alle Collezioni e ai Musei (da La conversazione classica a La casa degli efebi, ai Vasi delle Donne e delle Architetture). Ma anche organizza un sistema di famiglie di pezzi (da grandi a piccolissimi, dalla famiglia del Blu Ponti con oro inciso a punta d'agata alla famiglia del gran rosso di Doccia) con cui risuscita e insieme fa proliferare l'intera produzione, e la spinge alla serie. Con lo stesso spirito Ponti promuove il primo cata­logo completo della Ceramica Moderna d'Arte Richard-Ginori (con testi in italiano e in inglese), disegna lui stesso la pubblicità della Richard-Ginori in Domus, 1928, provoca i contatti della Richard-Ginori con le grandi esposizioni del momento, suscita occasioni di grandi in­terventi ambientali per la ceramica. È questo il modo con cui Ponti collabora con le industrie, e sarà così per tutta la sua vita. Con entusiasmo e distacco. (Così il suo neo­classico è un divertimento segreto: nei suoi labirinti gli angeli portano la sacca da golf) E Carlo Zerbi e Luigi Tazzini, dirigenti alla Manifattura di Doccia quando Ponti vi entrò, saranno i primi destinatari delle sue sem­pre urgenti lettere scritte e disegnate (lettere che martelle­ranno, felici, tutti i collaboratori: sono le sue lettere più belle, senza ossequio e senza sentimento): nei vasi l'ese­cuzione sia espressiva, e perfetta e bella, e le architettu­re tocchino pure un po' le nubi, non sta male: tutto il resto bene, e si facciano subito copie, e le riproduzioni de­gli oggetti venduti a Parigi siano fedelissime e accuratis­sime: è per l'onore della nostra casa, e si fotografino tutti i pezzi nuovi: manderemo le foto a Ojetti, a Parigi, a Monza: una serie o due occorrerà tenerle per Maraini, che potrebbe scrivere qualche articolo su riviste inglesi e americane: avete letto il Corriere di oggi? A Sesto Fiorentino il Museo delle Porcellane di Doccia conserva quattrocento pezzi del periodo Ponti (interno al Quinto Periodo della storia della Manifattura). La col­laborazione di Ponti si estenderà a episodi successivi ne­gli anni Trenta (e troveremo sempre le mani abili di Elena Diana) e negli anni Quaranta e Cinquanta.