fect. They both draw you to and guide you to the upper
reaches of the house. They are a vertical light sculpture
most effective by night, a permanent festival of celebratory light.
The golden walls of the living room are the setting for
Gunni & Trentino���s suite of sofas and armchairs, upholstered and tufted in fabric of pristine whiteness. These
sofas are almost plain enough to have mollified Ludwig
Wittgenstein, the philosopher who designed a house in
1920 in Vienna. And they are of such capacious and
comfortable proportion as to have pleased his countryman, Adolf Loos, who advocated planting timeless classics in Spartan interiors. In history, no sofas were more
comfortable than those designed throughout the twentieth century, and that is what we find here, masterfully
designed sofas of breathtaking simplicity.
HYLAND