Annotations cc: Vittorio Valigi
von Anoe Melliou
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Vittorio Valigi, designer and visual artist, navigates the intersection of the intimate and the industrial, where personal narratives meet contemporary critique. Design carries the weight of our histories, questions, and the fragments of ourselves we choose to reveal. This conversation delves into the spaces where trauma takes form. As design continually revisits its own history, we reflect on the challenge of crafting something deliberate and truly necessary.
Anoe: Your recent exhibition, Flesh and Metal: A Prosthetic Decade, embodies the interplay of material and meaning. Through annotations, collaborations, and complementary narratives, it feels both deeply personal and universally resonant. What is the overarching theme, and what does it signify to you?
Vittorio: The exhibition marks ten years since I underwent osteointegration surgery, where the portion of my right femoral bone affected by cancer was removed and replaced with a titanium and silver implant. The red moquette floor symbolizes flesh, soft and vibrant, while the metallic artworks reflect the profound fascination with an imposed material. This project became a vehicle for processing a decade of grief and transformation, a way to close a chapter while sharing that experience with others. As part of the exhibition, I’ve also launched a fundraising initiative to support scientific research in the medical field.
A: The red moquette and metallic surfaces create a striking tension, a dialogue between the organic and the industrial. It’s unsettling, but that dissonance gives the work its emotional potency. I noticed the bench includes engraved phrases such as God Chose You. What inspired those words?
V: A psychotherapist I met during chemotherapy described me as a “soldier of God,” chosen to endure this path. It felt manipulative, even dismissive, and left a lasting impression. The edge of the seat features the phrase, Live your day as if it’s your last, and critiques toxic positivity and the relentless pressure to maximize life. The bench is designed in collaboration with artist duo Swedish Girls, and the phrases are laser-cut. Drawn from personal experiences, the phrases serve as paradoxical commentaries.