Futurism & Sport Design
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OR USA: you can buy the book in this bookshop in New York |
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Futurism
was the first cultural and artistic movement of the twentieth century to
examine the emerging phenomenon of Sport, in which it recognised the very
essence of all that was modern. The Futurists were the first to create a new
aesthetic for disciplines such as football, tennis, cycling, motorcycling and
skiing. However their research was not limited to the visual arts, covering the
applied arts of fashion, design and graphics which they considered to be
equally important. Using a rich body of iconographic sources, the Futurism & Sport Design project aims
to understand the pioneering and radical contribution that this mainly Italian
movement brought to creativity in sport design. At the same time, it highlights
its continuing influence today.
Futurism and Sport
Founded in 1909, Futurism was the first art movement in modern times to deal with the theme of sport in a natural, organic way. Futurist works gave glimpses of a future that would increasingly be dominated by the energy of the new generations. To find a similar level of attention dedicated to the world of sport, one has to go back to the ancient Greeks; the Futurists introduced a completely new aesthetic which could be used to represent the new sporting activities of the era and which in turn represented a definite step forward from the classical world. Between 1910 and 1940 the movement found radical innovation in the expressive language used to describe sports such as football, cycling, motor sport, motorcycling, skiing, athletics and swimming. From painting to sculpture, from graphic design to fashion, Futurism paves the way for a momentous work of renewal. For the first time in the history of art, themes such as speed, movement and human dynamism are examined.
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| 1a Achille Funi Cover for Lussuria-Velocità (detail) Milano, Modernissima, 1921 |
1b R.A.M. (Ruggero Alfredo Michahelles) Fermata Plongeon (goalkeeper), 1929-32 Bronze, work lost Michahelles Archive, Florence |
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2a Vinicio Paladini Movimento e spazio, 1928 photomontage on cardboard, cm 30,6 x 23,8 Private collection |
2b Mario Dal Monte Bozzetto di vestito da bagno da donna, 1928 Gouache on cardboard, cm 22 x 16 Private collection, Imola |
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Chapter 2
Comparisons between Futurist fashion and
contemporary sports fashion
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3a Thayaht (Ernesto Michahelles) Modello di tuta, 1919-1920 Pen and watercolor on paper, cm 60,5 x 40 Galleria del Costume di Palazzo Pitti, Florence |
3b Ellesse, ski overall, advertising campaign, 1969 |
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4a Fortunato Depero Bozzetto del costume-maschera per 'Motolampade', 1929 Black pencil and ink on paper, cm 56 x 32 MART, Museo di Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto © by SIAE, 2006 |
4b Robe di Kappa, ski overall, 2002 c. 4c Atomic, ski shoe, 2004 |
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Chapter 3
Aerodynamic shapes, polimaterics, style,
inventions
Boccioni’s investigative research with sculpture leaned towards representing a “style of movement” as well as the new dynamic concepts: shapes are shown to suggest motion, ideally merging with their backgrounds and are enriched with new plastic rhythms. From similar concepts, Thayaht invented “traiettiva” which was the deformation of objects in motion via the fusion of trajectory and perspective. The shapes created by Boccioni, Thayaht and other Futurist sculptors can be seen as a precursor to the aerodynamic elements used today in sport design: sports cars, motor cycles, helmets and ski boots. The Futurists were also responsible for the avant-garde restyling of motorcycle fairing. This chapter presents a panorama of Thayaht and his relationship with sport as a stylist and inventor of new machines, such as the land yacht. At the end of the chapter there are some examples of Futurist inventions that are still used today for sun visors and waist packs.
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5a Thayaht (Ernesto Michahelles) Tuffo, 1932 Plaster model, metal (pedestal) altezza 289 cm, base 13 x 142 x 142 cm CLM Seeber collection, Rome |
5b Garmont, skiboot, mod. Diamond, 1980 |
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6a Mino Delle Site Studio della "tuta" termica femminile, con giberna portatutto (belt-bag), 1932 |
6b Eastpak, belt-bag, 2002 c. 6c Invicta, belt-bags, 1995 |
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Chapter 4
Comparing Futurist styles with graphics and
contemporary sports design
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7a Giacomo Balla Numeri innamorati (detail), 1920 Oil on canvas, cm 77 x 55 MART, Museo di Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto © by SIAE, 2006 |
7b Dynafit, skiboot, 1991-92 Fondazione Museo dello Scarpone e della Calzatura Sportiva, Montebelluna |
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8a Giacomo Balla Linee-forza del pugno di Boccioni (logo of the futurist movement), 1915 Gouache on paper, cm 58,5 x 73,5 Private collection © by SIAE, 2006 |
8b Cagiva logo 8c Tecnica logo |
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9a Fedele Azari Volo librato (Prospettive in volo), detail, 1926 Oil on canvas, cm 120 x 80,5 Private collection |
9b Lotto logo |
Valentina Durante (1975) is co-ordinator and chief trends and consumption analyst for the Sportsystem Fashion Observatory. She is the author of Sportsystem, tra fashion e performance, and curator of the annual Rapporto Osem on the Montebelluna Sportsystem district. She is also a free-lance contributor for a variety of publications in the sport-street-fashion sector. She is the local ADI (Association of Industrial Design) observer and teaches design and marketing in fashion.
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Sportsystem tra fashion e performance (only in Italian), by Valentina Durante, with 48 colour plates, Zanetti Editore 2004. |
Last modified 2008-04-28 10:39 AM











