Repetitive Glass Installations

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6:AM Milan Design Week Installation Explores Murano with Repetition

— April 22, 2026 — Art & Design
The 6:AM Milan Design Week installation presents a series of glass objects arranged through repetition and variation, reflecting the studio’s ongoing research into Murano techniques. Founded by Edoardo Pandolfo and Francesco Palù, the Milan-based practice works across lighting, furniture, and architectural installations, collaborating with artisans to produce cast and blown glass pieces. The exhibition brings together new works alongside existing collections, using repeated forms to create a structured visual system that emphasizes process over singular objects.

The installation extends beyond object display into a spatial environment that includes social areas and circulation paths. Set within a historic Milanese site, the project combines glass, architecture, and landscape into a continuous layout that encourages movement through the space. The studio’s approach centers on iteration within constraint, using repetition to define structure while allowing variation in texture, color, and form across each piece.

Image Credit: 6:AM

Trend Themes

  1. Repetitive Craft Systems — Patterns of repeated handcrafted elements create opportunities for modular production systems that preserve artisanal variability while enabling scalable output.
  2. Architextural Glass Integration — The blending of glass objects with circulation and social space points to adaptive façade and interior systems where repeated glass modules define both structure and spatial experience.
  3. Iterative Material Collaboration — Sustained studio-artisan research suggests platforms for prolonged co-development cycles that iterate material techniques and spawn new hybrid processes.

Industry Implications

  1. Lighting and Fixtures — Customizable, repeated glass forms indicate potential for lighting ranges that combine mass-custom production with distinct artisanal finishes.
  2. Architectural Design — Installations that use repetition to guide movement hint at façade and interior systems employing repeated elements to modulate circulation and acoustics.
  3. Luxury Homeware — Collections built from repeated but varied pieces suggest subscription or limited-run models that emphasize collectible uniformity with unique surface treatments.
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