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This latest volume in the MoMA One on One series focuses on Clara Porset¿s Butaque chair (c. 1957), the only object designed by a Latin American currently on view at the Museum. Clara Porset is one of the most important Latin American designers of the twentieth century. Though born in Matanzas, Cuba, Porset spent most of her life in Mexico, and throughout her career as a designer, writer, and teacher, she challenged social conventions during a time that offered few opportunities for the professional development of women. Her designs bridge the functional rationalism of modernism with traditional craft techniques and traditional materials, resulting in a novel type of production. Her Butaque Chair, recently acquired by The Museum of Modern Art in 2021, is the only object designed by a Latin American currently on view at MoMA. In this latest volume of the MoMA One on One series, scholar and curator Ana Elena Mallet explores Proset¿s idea that the Butaque is a ¿living design¿ and broadens our understanding of Latin American design.
In 1952, Cuban-Mexican designer Clara Porset organized Mexico's first design exhibition, El arte en la vida diaria. Objetos de buen diseäno hechos en Mâexico. That show, together with Porset's ideas, marked a turning point in the trajectory of design in this country by aspiring to unify local traditions and the dream of industrialization.This book surveys the genealogy of artisans, promoters, entrepreneurs,and designers who have contributed to the development of Mexican artisanal design for the better part of the last seventy years, staking their claims on a hybrid or mestizo form of material culture and furnishing modern life with a locally specific way of producing object
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