Compasso d'Oro

The Compasso d'Oro (Italian pronunciation: [komˈpasso ˈdɔːro]; 'Golden Compass') is an industrial design award originated in Italy in 1954. Initially sponsored by the La Rinascente, a Milanese department store, the award has been organised and managed by the Associazione per il Disegno Industriale (ADI) since 1964. The Compasso d'Oro is the first, and among the most recognized and respected design awards. It aims to acknowledge and promote quality in its field in Italy and internationally, and has been called both the "Nobel" and the "Oscar" of design.[1][2][3][4][5]

Compasso d'Oro
Compasso d'Oro logo
Awarded forIndustrial design award
LocationADI Design Museum (Milan)
CountryItaly
Presented byAssociazione per il Disegno Industriale
First awarded1954
Websiteadidesignmuseum.org
Compasso d'Oro award trophy
Pier Giacomo Castiglioni receives the Compasso d'Oro for the Luminator floor lamp designed for Gilardi & Barzaghi (1955)[6]
Franca Helg and Franco Albini receive the award for their work on the Milan Metro (1964)[7]

History

The Compasso d′Oro was established in 1954, and now it is the highest honour in the field of industrial design in Italy,[8] comparable to other prestigious international awards such as the Good Design award, iF Design Award, Red Dot Award, the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Awards, and the Good Design Award (Japan). It was the first award of its kind in Europe and soon took on an international dimension and relevance, multiplying the occasions on which the exhibitions of award-winning objects were held in Europe, the United States, Canada and Japan.

The original idea for the award is credited to Gio Ponti and Alberto Rosselli [it]. Many other leading architects and designers of the era including the Castiglioni brothers (Livio, Pier Giacomo, and Achille), Albe Steiner [it], Enzo Mari and Marco Zanuso were involved in aspects of its inception and early development.[1][9] The Compasso d'Oro logo (designed by Steiner) and award trophy itself invoke a drafting compass invented by Adalbert Göringer in 1893 to measure the Golden Section.[1][10]

At present the management department of the Compasso d'Oro is Italy Industrial Designing Association, and it is also the members of the International Industrial Designing Committee and the European Designing Bureau.[citation needed]

Since its inception, approximately 350 designers have been honoured with the Award,[1] for designs covering a wide range – from automobiles and bicycles to furniture and household objects, portable sewing machines, typewriters, calculators, clocks, lighting as well as concepts and systems, technical equipment, and yachts.[citation needed]

For the first time, the 2020 Compasso d'Oro included a "Products Career Award" which was given to three historical designs that have proven to be highly successful over time but were not awarded at the time of their inception: a 1962 floor lamp called Arco by Pier Giacomo and Achille Castiglioni; a bed design by Vico Magistretti from 1978 called "Nahalie"; and the now famous "Sacco" bean-bag chair designed by Piero Gatti, Cesare Paolini, and Franco Teodoro in 1968.[11]

The ADI Design Museum in Milan houses the historical collection of the ADI Compasso d’Oro Foundation, as well as temporary exhibitions, public talks and initiatives. On 22 April 2004, the Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities and Tourism – through its Superintendency for Lombardy – declared the collection of "exceptional artistic and historical interest", thus making it part of the national cultural heritage.[12][13] In 2020, the Milan square where the ADI Design Museum is situated was renamed "Piazza Compasso d'Oro" to honour the cultural and historical significance of the award.[14][15]

List of Compasso d'Oro Awards

YearJuryPresidentEntriesWinners
1st1954Aldo Bassetti, Cesare Brustio, Gio Ponti, Alberto Rosselli, Marco Zanuso570015
2nd1955Aldo Bassetti, Cesare Brustio, E. N. Rogers, Alberto Rosselli, Marco Zanuso130012
3rd1956Aldo Bassetti, Cesare Brustio, Franco Albini, Pier Giacomo Castiglioni, Alberto RosselliAlberto Rosselli (Birth of the ADI)14509
4th1957Aldo Bassetti, Cesare Brustio, Franco Albini, Pier Giacomo Castiglioni, Ignazio GardellaGiulio Castelli12005
5th1959Bruno Alfieri, Vico Magistretti, Giulio Minoletti, Augusto Morello, Giovanni RomanoLivio Castiglioni12006
6th1960Ludovico Belgiojoso, Vico Magistretti, Augusto Magnaghi, Augusto Morello, Marco ZanusoFranco Albini80010
7th1962Giulio Castelli, Franco Momigliano, Augusto Morello, Bruno Munari, Battista PininfarinaRoberto Olivetti9
8th1964Massimo Vignelli, Dante Giacosa, Vittorio Gregotti, Augusto Morello, Bruno Munari, Gino Valle [it]Aldo Basetti6
9th1967Aldo Basetti, Felice Dessi, Gillo Dorfles, Tomás Maldonado, Edoardo VittoriaMarco Zanuso13
10th1970Francesco Mazzucca, Franco Albini, Jean Baudrillard, Achille Castiglioni, Federico Correa, Vittorio Gregotti, Roberto Guiducci, Albe Steiner[16]Anna Castelli Ferrieri10
11th1979Andrea Branzi, Clino Trini Castelli, Massimo Morozzi, Angelo Cortesi, Gillo Dorfles, Augusto Morello, Arthur Pulos, Yuri Soloviev, Nanni StradaEnzo Mari116739
12th1981François Barrè, Cesare De Seta, Martin Kelm, Ugo La Pietra, Pierluigi SpadoliniRodolfo Bonetto16
13th1984Cino Boeri, Douglas Kelley, Antti Nurmesniemi, Giotto Stoppino, Bruno ZeviGiotto Stoppino11
14th1987Angelo Cortesi, Rodolfo Bonetto, Marino Marini, Cara Mc Carty, Philippe StarckAngelo Cortesi16
15th1989Pierliugi Molinari, Fredrik Wildhagen, Hans Wichmann, Cesare Stevan, Tomás MaldonadoPierluigi Molinari12
16th1991Silvio Ceccato, Marcello Inghilesi, Victor Margolin, Pierluigi Molinari, Antti Nurmesniemi, Vito NotoAngelo Cortesi14
17th1994Dante Giacosa, Vittoriano Viganò, Giovanni Anceschi, Paola Antonelli, Uta Brandes, Jacob Gantenbein, Marja Heemskerk, Vittorio Magnago Lampugnani, Marco Migliari, Gianemiglio Monti, Mario Trimarchi, Vito NotoAugusto Morello13
18th1998Achille Castiglioni, Giuseppe De Rita, Marianne Frandsen, Fritz Frenkler, Sadik Karamustafa, Tomás Maldonado, Marco ZanusoAugusto Morello15
19th2001Marie-Laure Jousset, Filippo Alison, François Burkhardt, Omar Calabrese, Francisco Jarauta, Maurizio Morgantini, Erik SpiekermannGiancarlo Iliprandi17
20th2004Tomas Maldonado, Fulya Erdemci, Robert Fitzpatrick, Yutaka Mino, Pietro Petraroia, Richard Sapper, Angela Schönberger, Tomàš VlčekCarlo Forcolini15
21st2008Mario Bellini, Moh-Jin Chew, Lieven Daenens, Carla Di Francesco, Carlo Forcolini, Norbert Linke, Emanuele Pirella, Richard R. Whitaker,Miguel Milá12
22nd2011Arturo Dell'Acqua Bellavitis, Chantal Clavier Hamaide, Umberto Croppi, Guto Indio Da Costa, Pierre Keller [fr], Cecilie Manz, Clive Roux, Shiling Zheng22
23rd2014Anders Byriel, Vivian Cheng, Giorgio De Ferrari, Stefan Diez, Defne Koz, Mario Gagnon, Paolo Lomazzi, Laura Traldi23[17]
24th2016Gabriella Bottini, Toshiyuki Kita, Mugendi K. M’Rithaa, Marc Sadler, Cinzia Anguissola d’Altoè Scacchetti, Yossef Schvetz, Walter Maria de Silva
25th2018Carlo Galimberti, Nevio Di Giusto, Yongqi Lu, Francesco Trabucco, Motoki YoshioFrancesco Trabucco
26th2020Luca Bressan, Virginio Briatore, Jin Kuramoto, Denis Santachiara [it], Päivi TahkokallioDenis Santachiara18
27th2022Mario Cucinella [it], Stefano Micelli [it], Cloe Piccoli, Annachiara Sacchi, Mirko ZardiniAnnachiara Sacchi29220[18]
28th2024Maria Cristina Didero, Luciano Galimberti, Francisco Gomez Paz [es], Renata Cristina Mazzantini, Toshiyuki Kita [2]Luciano Galimberti20[19]

See also

References

Further reading