Notable designs from this period include the headquarters for the Società Ippica Torinese (1937–39 destroyed in 1960) in Turin and the headquarters of Confederazione degli Agricoltori (1933–34) in Cuneo. After graduating in 1931, Mollino began working in his father’s practice and on independent projects. He next enrolled at the School of Architecture at the University of Turin. The younger Mollino initially enrolled at Turin Polytechnic, and studied engineering for one year there before attending an art history course in Ghent, Belgium, for six months in 1929. Casa Mollino, Turin, Images courtesy of Fulvio and Napoleone Ferrari / Museo Casa Mollinoīorn in Turin, Italy, in 1905, mid-century modern designer, architect, photographer, and writer Carlo Mollino was the son of prominent civil engineer Eugenio Mollino (1873–1953).
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |