MILAN — Dimorestudio’s Emiliano Salci and Britt Moran’s latest neighbors are bankers, lawyers and equities traders. Their new gallery is so close to the Milan Stock Exchange, they might even be able to hear the opening bell ring. On Sunday, the founders of the interiors and architecture firm unveiled Dimoregallery during Milan Design Week here, on Via San Vittore al Teatro, just steps from the Bourse on Piazza degli Affari.
It’s a new location where the design community and the public will have access to purchase Dimorestudio pieces, as well as pieces from their Interni Venosta collection, vintage pieces and finds acquired through their own unique lens and taste.
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Inside, a curatorial journey unfolds and is enriched with pieces from key figures in Italy’s design history: tables by Italian architect Luigi Caccia Dominioni, and lamps and chairs by designer Gabriella Crespi. Spanning two floors, the former bank features a fully functioning vault, which now houses precious works of art instead of stacks of euros and jewelry. In a dedicated room, furnishings engage in a dialogue with a bronze bamboo cane installation by Osanna Visconti, further enhancing the gallery’s immersive experience.
Dimorestudio worked with Cardi Gallery to outfit the space with modern and contemporary art, specifically with the works of Jannis Kounellis and other 20th-century and contemporary masters.
“The gallery positions itself as a completely new context in the Milanese scene, capable of combining curatorial rigor, aesthetic vision, and cultural layering, transforming the visitor’s experience into a journey through memory, innovation, and the poetry of space,” the firm said.
Since launching their Interni Venosta collection in 2024, Salci and Moran have been looking to reach a broader public with their design vision.
At the launch, Interni Venosta was made in collaboration with Tuscan furniture and contract firm Fabbri Services for a collection of fine furniture that mixes retro with a contemporary vision.
The latest showcase was unveiled here in tandem with the gallery on Sunday at Milano’s Palazzo Olivazzi, a private home which was opened to the public for a rare viewing. Said to have been home to Albert Einstein’s family for six years in 1894, the historic site is situated on via Bigli 21 and is a shrine to turn-of-the-20th century architecture and decor.