A look to the future with the innovations at SaloneSatellite 2023
The themes informing the event dedicated to designers under35 are training and the design of the future
Founded by Marva Griffin in 1998, SaloneSatellite is the Salone del Mobile.Milano space dedicated to interface between young designers and businesses. This edition is a particularly packed one, featuring the creations of 550 designers under35 from 31 different countries, along with 28 Design Schools and Universities from 18 different countries.
The choice of theme for this edition, Design Schools – Universities / BUILDING THE (IM)POSSIBLE Process, Progress, Practice, was by no means random, and the work by the student graduates-to-be is intended to respond to the question “Design: WHERE ARE YOU GOING?” with new approaches for tackling the significant challenges that environmental, economic and social changes are posing.
The installation, curated by the architect Ricardo Bello Dias, creates a sort of backdrop formed by the design school stands, against which the workstations of the young designers unfold. Panels with small metal wefts reflect a soft, natural light that almost seems to want to strike up a contrast between the renewal of slow design, on a human scale, and the frenzied outside world. This also forms the inspiration for Euroluce, which is hosting SaloneSatellite in its pavilions, and which is making a return to the Salone del Mobile.Milano after 4 long years.
One of the schools, POLI.Design, is on home turf – it’s the Design Department at Milan Polytechnic University, which has come up with a curious multimedia system that, through a coloured lens, a rudimentary hearing device and a floor plastered with the QR codes of the students’ projects, aims to respond to the question “Design: WHERE ARE YOU GOING?” The DAE, Design Academy Eindhoven, is showcasing an experimental live radio that will broadcast debates curated by the students for the entire duration of the Salone del Mobile.Milano.
The College of Design and Innovation, Tongji University, is presenting the EndlessForm project, set up by Professor Zhang Zhoujie, which uses high technology and algorithms to create design objects. Then the ECAL/Ecole Cantonale d’Art de Lausanne at the University of Art and Design Lausanne is showcasing four projects dotted around the city, whilst the Pratt institute of New York has focused on five words, each interpreting a different value: “enable”, “empower”, “connect”, “humanize” and “sustain”.
Bringing together the values shared by Euroluce and SaloneSatellite, which may be different in form but are actually deeply connected – promoting design tailored to living well and to sustainability – the exhibition Sate… light. 1998-2022 SaloneSatellite Young Designers, a collection of lamps conceived by SaloneSatellite designers that have since gone into production, is being held in the space bordering the two events.