A New Exhibit Puts the Work of Ettore Sottsass in Dialogue with Three Contemporary Talents

The show at New York’s Yossi Milo Gallery features pieces by the irreverent designer alongside John Gill, Daniel Gordon, and Emily Mullin

Modern art gallery exhibit featuring blue-themed paintings and pottery displayed against a minimalist white wall.
Installation view of RGB: John Gill, Daniel Gordon, Emily Mullin and Ettore Sottsass at New York’s Yossi Milo Gallery. Photo: Olympia Shannon

Founder of the Memphis Group, a design movement of the 1980s defined by the proliferation of saturated colors and abstract forms, Ettore Sottsass created vibrant furniture, glassware, ceramics, and other whimsical objects eagerly sought after by collectors today. And his influence on contemporary talents is far reaching.

Now, a new exhibition, on view at New York’s Yossi Milo Gallery through August 19, explores the connection between the architect, designer, and creative provocateur and three artists working today. Concentrating on the notion of building, the presentation, “RGB: John Gill, Daniel Gordon, Emily Mullin, and Ettore Sottsass,” also nods to the red, green, and blue color system used in early computer and television screens.

Contemporary art gallery with vibrant paintings, sculptures, and large window showcasing urban street view.
Daniel Gordon, Blue Still Life with White Peonies, Eggs and Onions (2019), displayed with Emily Mullin’s Ettore (2022) vessel and a multicolor ceramic vase by John Gill at Yossi Milo Gallery. Photo: Olympia Shannon

Placed in dialogue throughout the gallery, the pieces examine the ideas of construction, both materially and conceptually. The work of Brooklyn artist Daniel Gordon transforms the traditional still life using analog and digital processes. Gordon finds images of everyday objects online, printing them on paper and then cutting them out before arranging them in a three-dimensional tableau that he photographs with a large-format camera.

His works in the exhibition adhere to the RGB palette, reflecting Sottsass’s preference for bright colors and graphic patterns. With its jolts of electric blue, his Blue Still Life with White Peonies, Eggs and Onions (2019), a pigment print with UV lamination, makes the kind of setting viewers would commonly discover in a kitchen look surreal.

Red vase with dried foliage on white cabinet with drawers in a minimalist room.
Emily Mullin, Red I, 2022. Photo: Olympia Shannon
Artistic arrangement of tall, slender flowers in green vases on a blue wall shelf against a light background.
Emily Mullin, xtravaganza I, 2022. Photo: Olympia Shannon

From her studio in Brooklyn, Emily Mullin creates multi-media sculptures encompassing brightly colored and heavily patterned ceramic vases and steel shelves of her own design; each playful vessel is finished with live flowers. It’s Mullin’s palette and interpretation of historical forms that most strongly connects to Sottsass’s work, as his glass and ceramic pieces frequently inspired by ancient vessels. Red I (2022), a cherry-colord, raku-fired vase with intricate handles, is filled with leafy branches while the artist’s xtravaganza I (2022) is a study in green, with two chartreuse vessels bursting with feathery stalks perched on a blue, powder-coated steel shelf.

Contemporary art gallery interior with sculptures and paintings on white walls and a polished concrete floor.
John Gill’s Triptych (2022) installed in the Yossi Milo Gallery exhibition “RGB: John Gill, Daniel Gordon, Emily Mullin & Ettore Sottsass.” Photo: Olympia Shannon

An established ceramic artist whose work is in the collections of the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, John Gill teaches at Alfred University, which is renowned for its school for ceramics. Color and pattern are common in his oeuvre, but three of the pieces in this exhibition—each made from slabs of clay and all with the title Triptych—merge totem-like vessels into architectonic compositions that relate to Sottsass’s work of the 1970s and ’80s.

Contemporary art gallery with abstract painting, wall shelves with plants, and a geometric green sculpture installation.
Ettore Sottsass’s Alessandria D’Egitto Photo: Olympia Shannon

Finally, Sottsass himself is represented by two colorful glass mirrors made by the Italian company Glas Italia, a blue glass vase from Fontana Arte, a bookcase made of wood and plastic laminate from 1980, and two blown-glass pieces on tall bases from the late ’90s, made by Cenedese. These works, particularly the vase and the bookcase, evoke Sottsass’s contributions to Memphis, with their bold forms and emphatic colors.

The exhibition offers a variety of approaches, but with a common thread of color, texture, and pattern the compilation is both provocative and refreshing.

“RGB: John Gill, Daniel Gordon, Emily Mullin, and Ettore Sottsass” is on view through August 19 at Yossi Milo Gallery, 245 Tenth Avenue, New York.