Austin Way Magazine - GreenGale Publishing - There is a place beyond the crowds, beyond the ropes, where dreams are realized and success is celebrated. You are invited.
Issue link: http://digital.greengale.com/i/692367
A brush with history: Sicily (ABOVE LEFT) is a major source of inspiration for the refrigerators in the new Dolce & Gabbana collab with Smeg, which draws on the rich tradition of elaborately painted Sicilian carts. ABOVE RIGHT: A refrigerator designed by brothers Antonio and Giuseppe Bevilacqua. CUCINA COUTURE DOLCE & GABBANA REDEFINES "COOL" WITH ITS LATEST DESIGNER COLLABORATION. BY JILL SIERACKI "We really do draw endless inspiration from Italy," says Stefano Gabbana, half of the forever trendsetting duo behind Dolce & Gabbana, which, for the first time, has partnered with luxe Italian appliance brand Smeg on a limited-edition collection of hand-painted refrigerators. "Both Domenico [Dolce] and I love our roots and where we come from… it's almost as if we are giving back to Italy everything we feel it has given to us." Each of the 100 Fab 28 Smeg refrigerators is unique, hand- painted, and signed by a Sicilian artist—including mother-daughter duo Adriana Zambonelli and Tiziana Nicosia; craftsmen Biagio Castilletti and Damiano Rotella; and brothers Antonio and Giuseppe Bevilacqua, both ceramics artists—and features iconic Sicilian images such as lemons, cart wheels, and the trinacria, the head of Medusa surrounded by three bent running legs. "Vibrant colors, references to the local culture—it's everything that we love and that reminds us of Italy," says Domenico Dolce of the refrigerators, which retail for €30,000 (approximately $34,000). "Much of our work is all about the details. That's something that's always present and part of our brand DNA—this project is no exception." smeg.com . "IT'S EVERYTHING THAT WE LOVE AND THAT REMINDS US OF ITALY." —DOMENICO DOLCE PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF DOLCE & GABBANA (REFRIGERATOR, ARTWORK); GETTY IMAGES (LANDSCAPE) 116 AUSTINWAY.COM SPACE OBJET