1. Home
  2. Interior Design & Contract 11
  3. Like Clay on the Potter’s Wheel

Like Clay on the Potter’s Wheel

“Mosca.Bianca” Ceramics Workshop and Exhibition Venue

AACM-Atelier Architettura Chinello Morandi

Like Clay on the Potter’s Wheel
By Editorial Staff -

In Padua, Atelier Architettura Chinello Morandi (AACM) has designed Mosca.Bianca, a workshop and exhibition venue that celebrates the craft, form, and material of ceramics in a setting that balances design, art, and the creative process. Also hosting courses and events, every element of this hybrid space contributes to a living narrative about ceramics.

AACM conceived the interior as a sculptural volume spun from the ceiling around a central core, like clay on a potter’s wheel. The design derives its impact from focusing attention on a single overhead light that illuminates an apparently monolithic table. Designed as a kind of exhibition altar, its exposed joinery and overlapping openings reveal nested workstations. Architecture within architecture, it forms a multilayered composition with hidden functionality. Stripped to its essence, the table comprises floating Okoumé panels supported by T-frames that balance lightness and stability to meet the practical demands of working clay.

Come l’argilla sul tornio | © Marco Lumini (Catalogo), courtesy Atelier Architettura Chinello Morandi Ispirata al Cenacolo Vinciano, la prima esposizione ospitata nello spazio Mosca.Bianca richiama la sacralità del tavolo come altare espositivo, con gli utensili di lavoro, attori tendenzialmente esclusi dalle mostre dei prodotti finiti, disposti come fossero posate, piatti e bicchieri di un banchetto ceramico che sta per iniziare.

Mosca.Bianca’s walls are clay plaster, a symbolic choice that evokes the life cycle of terracotta and underscores the value of reuse and recovery as part of a circular approach to design. From the raw clay to finished pieces exhibited on the walls, ceiling, and table, every element underscores the transition from process to result, making to form, and material to space. As if backstage in a theatrical set, modeling tools are concealed behind curtains, only to be brought out during workshops so as to maintain a narrative cohesion and foster a sense of discovery.

The inaugural exhibition – entitled The Last Supper, referencing the Leonardo da Vinci mural – underscored the role of the table as an exhibition altar. Arranged as a ceramic banquet, the tools take on a ritual quality, inviting visitors to gather and witness the transition from making to display.

By reusing materials, drawing on a potter’s wheel for design inspiration, and embracing clay’s plasticity, Mosca.Bianca blends craft and esthetics. It serves as both a studio and experimental forum, where the material tells its own story and the process becomes art.

Location: Padua, Italy 
Client: Mosca Bianca Ceramics
Completion: 2025 
Gross Floor Area: 50 m2 
Architect and Interior Designer: Atelier Architettura Chinello Morandi

Photography: Marco Lumini (Catalogo), courtesy of Atelier Architettura Chinello Morandi

You might also like:
Interior Design & Contract 11
Interior Design & Contract 11

THE PLAN Interior Design & Contract 11 is the eleventh supplement that THE PLAN has dedicated to the world of interior architecture. The publication, out in September 2025 as a supplement to THE PLAN 164, looks at around twenty of the most important... Read More

Paper Version Paper Version
12.00 €
Digital version Digital version
5.49 €
Keep up with the latest trends in the architecture and design world
Tag
#Marco Lumini  #Padua  #Italy  #Europe  #2025  #AACM-Atelier Architettura Chinello Morandi  #Interior Design & Contract 

© Maggioli SpA • THE PLAN • Via del Pratello 8 • 40122 Bologna, Italy • T +39 051 227634 • P. IVA 02066400405 • ISSN 2499-6602 • E-ISSN 2385-2054
ITC Avant Garde Gothic® is a trademark of Monotype ITC Inc. registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and which may be registered in certain other jurisdictions.