Fabio Novembre's colourful design brings Italian graphics show to life

Date
27 June 2012

The key to curating any big exhibition is structure – clear enough to help users navigate the space but not so heavy-handed that they feel patronised or put upon. If you can create something that looks great then so much the better, and Fabio Novembre’s work on the Triennale Design Museum’s Grafica italiana show ticks all the right boxes.

A simple but vibrant colour coding system helps make sense of a show that encompasses all sorts of Italian graphic design, including letters, books, magazines, culture and politics, advertising, packaging, visual identity, signposting and video. But it also adds a really pleasing visual element to a celebration of communication and aesthetics which adds enormously to the show’s appeal.

In a peerlessly charming write-off on his site, Fabio cheerfully admits that he was approached only after Enzo Mari pulled out and it begins: “It takes wisdom and cunningness to construct a sacred place for the Muses,” before going on to reference Goethe, Newton and various classical allusions.

It also includes the wonderful observation that: “There is only one Italian school of graphics, even though it has no proper structure, hardly surprising since the same could be said about everything connected with our dear old unpredictable country.”

The exhibition runs until February 24 2013.

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Fabio Novembre: Grafica italiana at Triennale Design Museum

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Fabio Novembre: Grafica italiana at Triennale Design Museum

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Fabio Novembre: Grafica italiana at Triennale Design Museum

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Fabio Novembre: Grafica italiana at Triennale Design Museum

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Fabio Novembre: Grafica italiana at Triennale Design Museum

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Fabio Novembre: Grafica italiana at Triennale Design Museum

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Fabio Novembre: Grafica italiana at Triennale Design Museum

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About the Author

Rob Alderson

Rob joined It’s Nice That as Online Editor in July 2011 before becoming Editor-in-Chief and working across all editorial projects including itsnicethat.com, Printed Pages, Here and Nicer Tuesdays. Rob left It’s Nice That in June 2015.

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