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Bitossi Hedgehog

Blue Hedgehog Figurine by Aldo Londi
By Bitossi
Located in Milan, IT
This figurine features a distinctive hedgehog shape crafted using press-molded refractory white
Category

2010s Italian Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Ceramic

Blue Hedgehog Figurine by Aldo Londi
Blue Hedgehog Figurine by Aldo Londi
$200 / item
H 5.12 in W 5.91 in D 5.91 in

Recent Sales

1960s Italian Art Ceramic Pottery Bitossi Hedgehog Piggy Bank Aldo Londi Italy
By Bitossi, Aldo Londi
Located in Chula Vista, CA
Vintage 1960s by Aldo Londi of Bitossi ceramic Art Pottery Italy MCM Handmade piggy bank figural
Category

Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Animal Sculptures

Materials

Ceramic, Pottery

Aldo Londi Hedgehog Scavo Design, Italy 1960s
By Bitossi, Aldo Londi
Located in Morazzone, Varese
A beautiful Aldo Londi designed hedgehog from the "Scavo" series. With sgraffito lines decoration
Category

Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Ceramics

Materials

Ceramic, Pottery

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Bitossi for sale on 1stDibs

Like a Fellini movie, the ceramics of the famed Italian company Bitossi Ceramiche embody a creative spectrum that ranges from the playful and earthy to the high-minded and provocative. Based in Florence, Bitossi draws on craft traditions that date back to the 1500s. These find expression in Bitossi pottery that includes artisanal vintage vases and animal figures by the firm’s longtime art director Aldo Londi, as well as the colorful, totemic vessels designed by the high priest of postmodernism, Ettore Sottsass.

Bitossi was incorporated by Guido Bitossi in 1921, though the family began making art pottery in the mid-19th century. In the 1930s, Londi came aboard, bringing with him a mindset that respected time-honored craft, yet looked also to the future. On the one hand, Londi’s perspective fostered the making of Bitossi’s popular whimsical cats, owls, horses and other animal figures, hand-shaped and -carved and finished in a rich azure glaze known as “Rimini Blue.”

But with his other hand, Londi reached out to thoughtful, experimental designers such as Sottsass. After hiring Sottsass to design ceramics for his New York imports company, Raymor, American entrepreneur Irving Richards connected the Milanese design polymath to Londi, who introduced Sottsass to ceramics in the 1950s.

During that decade, some 20 years before he founded the Memphis postmodern design collective in Milan, Sottsass used the Bitossi kilns to create timeless works that manifest both primitive forms and modern geometries. In later decades, Bitossi would welcome new generations of designers, which have included such names as Ginevra Bocini and Karim Rashid.

While always looking forward, Bitossi is firm in their belief that mastery of craft is the first step towards beautiful design. As you will see from the works offered on these pages, that is a winning philosophy.

Find a collection of vintage Bitossi decorative objects, lighting and serveware on 1stDibs.