Let's face it, there were a ton of super-cool sofas designed and manufactured by super-cool furniture designers in the 1960s and 1970s. The Togo sofa by Michel Ducaroy (
here), the Terrazza sofa by de Sede and Ubald Klug (
here), the Élysée Sofa by Pierre Paulin (
here), and the Serpentine sofa by Vladimir Kagan (
here). And to this illustrious list in our series Know Your Sofas, I am delighted to add the equally super-cool Camaleonda sofa by Mario Bellini.
Born in 1935, Mario Bellini's amazingly varied and prolific design career started in 1963. Among many other thihngs he was, and you might want to sit down for this, chief product designer at Olvetti from 1963 to 1991, designed furnishings for B&B Italia and Cassina and Natuzzi, hi-fi systems, headphones and electric organs for Yamaha, lamps for Artemide, Erco and Flos, office furniture for Vitra, and was an auto deisgn consultant for Renault. And he has twenty-five of his designs in the permanent design collection of the New York MoMA. Wow. As of this writing, Bellini is 87 and still designing at his studio
Mario Bellini Architects.
But back to his Camaleonda sofa...designed for B&B Italia in 1970. In a
2020 interview with Architectural Digest, Bellini said, "I crossed two words:
camaleonte, or chameleon, an extraordinary animal capable of adapting to its environment, and
onda, or wave." This portmanteau is a perfect word for modular seating that can be arranged in many different ways to suit a specific room or environment. Here it is in an original B&B Italia advertisement in 1971.
The sofa is held together with an ingenious system of cables and hooks. And I love how the upholstery ends up looking like it is draped rather than tightly tacked down.
Here it is in the Malibu home of Beastie Boy Mike D.
And here it is in the amazing Brooklyn townhouse of Athena Calderone as featured in architectural Digest in 2018.
Although the sofa went out of production in 1979 and originals auction off for more than a pretty penny, B&B Italia, the original manufacturers, have brought it back, now featuring recycled and recyclable materials.
Happy designing!
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