Collection: Nanda Vigo
Nanda Vigo was born in Milan in 1936. She lives in Milan and East Africa. She was interested in art from a very young age when she spent time with Filippo de Pisis, a family friend, and when she saw the architecture of Giuseppe Terragni from whom - we might guess - she learned to pay attention to light. After graduating from the Institut Polytechnique, Lausanne, and studying further in San Francisco, in 1959 she established her own studio in Milan. From then on, the basic theme of her art was the conflict/harmony between light and space, something the artist uses in her artwork as well as in her architecture and design. From 1959 on she frequented Lucio Fontana's studio, and then she became close to the artists who had founded the Azimut gallery in Milan, Piero Manzoni and Enrico Castellani. During that period, due to her travels for numerous exhibitions throughout Europe (more than 400 solo and group shows), Vigo came to know the artists and places of the ZERO movement in Germany, the Netherlands, and France.
In 1959 she began to plan the ZERO house in Milan, which was completed only in 1962. From 1964 to 1966 she participated in at least thirteen ZERO exhibitions, including NUL 65 at the Stedelijk, Amsterdam, and ZERO: An Exhibition of European Experimental Art at the Gallery of Modern Art, Washington D.C. In 1965 the artist curated the legendary ZERO avant-garde show in Lucio Fontana's studio in Milan, in which 28 artists took part. Between 1965 and 1968 she collaborated with Giò Ponti to create the Casa sotto la foglia house in Malò, Vicenza. In 1971 Vigo was awarded the New York Award for Industrial Design for her lamp designs (Lampada Golden Gate) and, in the same year, she designed and built one of her most spectacular projects: the Casa-Museo Remo Brindisi, Lido di Spina (Ferrara).