Bespoke Partnership
Rosewood’s ‘Objects That Speak, a conversation continued with Andrea Branzi’ gets Milan Design Week talking
Rosewood’s immersive installation explores design as a reflection of place, bringing together works by Andrea Branzi and a global roster of contemporary designers, artists and makers
In Partnership With Rosewood
There’s a moment, stepping off Via Carlo De Cristoforis and into Rosewood’s ‘Objects that Speak, a conversation continued with Andrea Branzi ’, where the pace of Milan Design Week begins to shift. My experience of the city during the annual fair has often felt accelerated, shaped by the sheer volume of exhibitions and fleeting moments; here, you’ll find space to pause.
Outside the exhibition
Presented by Rosewood, the exhibition sets works by Italian architect and designer Andrea Branzi (1938-2023) in conversation with pieces by nine revered contemporary talents, whose works feature at five of Rosewood’s art- and design-filled properties around the world. Curated by Deyan Sudjic, director emeritus of the London Design Museum, the show operates as a dialogue between disciplines, geographies and ways of thinking about design.
A sense of place – and of being present within it – is immediately apparent. The exhibition unfolds gradually, through light, material and spacing, encouraging a slower kind of engagement. It’s an experience shaped as much by mood as by the objects within it.
Nicholas Shurey ‘Sidetable’ – Shurey’s pieces are on view at The Chancery Rosewood, London
Branzi, a key figure in the Italian Radical Design movement and a founder of avant-garde architecture collective Archizoom, ‘showed us how design reflects the distinct culture of time and place’, says Sudjic. Branzi also embraced the idea of the ‘unrepeatable’ experience, achieved in design, for example, through the use of natural materials and hand production techniques to create works that are truly unique. You’ll find that illustrated here in a glowing gathering of his characterful, almost anthropomorphic, handcrafted lamps, made from Japanese rice paper and Belgian bluestone, alongside a pair of unique wall hangings.
Branzi’s ethos chimes with Rosewood’s own design philosophy. Across its properties, the brand approaches design as a way of connecting people to place – working with artists and makers to create environments that reflect the distinct local culture while also contributing to its ongoing evolution.
Andrea Branzi's handcrafted lamps
Here, that philosophy is distilled into a single exhibition, where each object carries a story from its context and origin, whether through its materials, narrative or method of making. Works as diverse as a bronze bonsai by Marc Quinn (which has a sibling at The Chancery Rosewood in London), a ‘sweeping’ clock by Maarten Bass (also see his work at Rosewood Amsterdam), and a porcelain piece by ceramicist Angelika Marie Stiegler (who has an exuberant 3m work at Rosewood Munich) suggest a continuing conversation – one that spans generations and disciplines and reflects new ways of seeing and shaping the world.
As visitors move through the space, the works reveal themselves in sequence. Some are playful, others more formal; some are instantly recognisable, others less so. Together, they reflect a wide geographical sweep of Rosewood’s properties, and a range of approaches, unified less by style than by a shared sensitivity to context.
Inside the exhibition space
What may stay with you most, however, is a sense of stillness. Amid the intensity of Milan Design Week, here’s a deliberate pause. There’s no prescribed route, no single focal point demanding attention. Instead, the experience is shaped by how you choose to navigate it.
It’s not about directing interpretation but allowing space for it – something that aligns closely with Rosewood’s broader purpose: to create a future where people and place enrich one another.
Frederik Molenschot ‘Artificial Forest’ on view at Rosewood Amsterdam
The exhibition also signals a wider moment for the brand. With Rome coming up in the year ahead, Milan in 2027, and Venice to follow, Rosewood is expanding its presence in Italy, each property, as you’d expect, shaped by its immediate cultural and architectural context.
‘Objects that Speak, a conversation continued with Andrea Branzi’ runs 21-25 April 2026 at Via Carlo De Cristoforis 1, Milan, rosewoodhotels.com. Featured artists and designers from Rosewood’s roster include: Frederik Molenschot, Frankey, Maarten Baas, Casper Braat (Rosewood Amsterdam); Angelika Stiegler (Rosewood Munich); Jaime Hayon (Rosewood Villa Magna); Bianca Tschaikner (Rosewood Schloss Fuschl); Marc Quinn and Nicholas Shurey (The Chancery Rosewood, London).
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Gavin Hastings is Bespoke Copywriter at Wallpaper* and has a wealth of experience from the luxury space, having previously worked with high-end brands including COS, Zegna, and Gucci to create impactful, modern content.
-
Here’s what to see at NYCxDesign 2026, according to our editorsMark your calendars and start your engines, because New York's biggest design celebration is back, 14-20 May. Here's what to see
-
Edra takes the sofa in a more flexible new direction – give it a spinWith the ‘Anywhere’ sofa by Francesco Binfaré, presented at Milan Design Week and complete with rotating backrests, the brand pushes the boundaries of modular design
-
Joris Laarman is reimagining design’s relationship with natureThe Dutch designer’s exhibition at Friedman Benda in New York (until 24 July 2026) suggests a future in which furniture can provide a resting place for non-human life, too
-
The new Fornasetti store in Milan is a tactile delightThe Italian furniture brand unveiled its newly renovated flagship store during Milan Design Week, designed to act as a living organism
-
Discover Andrea Branzi through the eyes of his friend, Toyo Ito, at a major new exhibitionConceived by Branzi’s long-term friend and collaborator, the exhibition at Triennale Milano offers a fluid, personal reading while tracing a career that reshaped contemporary design
-
Milan Design Week by night: the best parties from a week of designFrom a dinner on the stage of La Scala to a late party with Honey Dijon on the decks, these are some of our favourite after-dark happenings at Milan Design Week 2026
-
Sound stole the show at Milan Design Week 2026: what does it mean for the future of interiors?Across the fair, a huge amount of spaces and launches were dedicated to sound, from immersive listening rooms to musical furniture and DJ consoles. We ask four experts about the role of sound in the future of interior design
-
Patricia Urquiola’s modular sauna reimagines medieval architectureAt Salone del Mobile 2026, Italian wellness brand Effe united with Patricia Urquiola on ‘Baluar’, a new sauna and hammam collection
-
The new interior design trends we spotted at Salone del Mobile 2026Four interior design trends to look out for in 2026 and beyond, from lacquer infiltrating soft furnishings to sculptural tables and maximalist wallcoverings
-
At Prada Home in Milan, Theaster Gates weaves a story of cultures and rituals through objectsAt Prada Home in Milan, Theaster Gates works through clay, assembling a cabinet of chawan – tea bowls shaped by ritual – where origin gives way to transmission
-
The best Japanese design from Milan Design Week 2026Discover the best of Japanese design from Milan Design Week and Salone del Mobile 2026, showcasing innovative designs from established brands and emerging designers (and including the latest work from the Japanese master of modern bathtub design)