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Sergio Savarese, 48, Dies in a Plane Crash; Designer Employed Informal Shapes in Break From Past

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Sep 18, 2006, 2:03:26 AM9/18/06
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Sergio Savarese, 48, Dies in a Plane Crash; Designer Employed Informal
Shapes in Break From Past


By BARBARA GRAUSTARK, NY Times
Published: September 18, 2006
Sergio Savarese, a designer known for lyrical shapes and a founder of
the furniture store Dialogica, died on Friday in a small-plane crash in
Moffat County, Colo., that also took the life of his flying companion,
Ivan Luini, according to their families. Mr. Savarese was 48 and lived
in Manhattan and Southampton, N.Y.

The two men co-owned a plane registered to East End Aviation in
Westhampton Beach, N.Y., and often traveled cross-country, visiting
their respective stores, according to family members.

In 1988, working with his wife, Monique, an interior designer, Mr.
Savarese created Dialogica, one of the first retailers in SoHo to
feature contemporary furniture designs. They developed Dialogica into a
multimillion-dollar business, with stores in Los Angeles and New York,
and distributors in other cities.

Mr. Savarese's expressive and sculptural silhouettes and his wife's
bold use of color helped mark a new informality in contemporary design
- a break from the spare or historical aesthetics that were popular
in the late 80's. Tailored velvet sofas, chairs and daybeds commanded
cheerful attention with yellow, crimson or cerulean blue upholstery,
with colors mixed together in a single piece .

Mr. Savarese was born in Naples and moved to Rome. He was, his wife
said, a designer by accident. He studied as a geologist and spent seven
years working for health organizations in Africa, analyzing soil to
determine what crops to grow. Returning to Italy, he designed a folding
stool, found someone to produce it, and then expanded his collection.
He met his future wife, who was studying at Domus Academy in Milan, and
they married in 1987.

They drew praise at the first International Contemporary Furniture Fair
in New York, which encouraged them - despite no retail experience -
to risk opening a store on Broome Street in SoHo, alongside a handful
of design pioneers like Ad Hoc Software and Murray Moss. They produced
furniture in the Bronx, ultimately selling the factory to the artisans
who continue to make the furnishings today.

Their emphasis on strong sensual forms that reinterpreted classical
styles, and the vibrant colors, struck a popular chord. "They gave a
legitimacy to expressive modernism, a different door of the modern
movement," Arlene Hirst, a senior editor of Metropolitan Home
magazine, said yesterday. "Their style was romantic, and they have
stayed with that one design vocabulary, which is very appealing to
people who don't like the hard edges of modern design."

In addition to his wife, Monique, Mr. Savarese is survived by their
twin 9-year-old sons, Luca and Matteo; his mother, Adriana Sora; a
sister, Rita Fradelloni; and a brother, Sati Savarese, all of whom live
in Rome.

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