Lina Bo Bardi
Architect Lina Bo Bardi, born Achillina Bo in Rome in 1914, made an indelible mark on mid-century Brazilian architecture and design after emigrating there following the destruction of her office in Milan during World War II.
Before starting her own firm in Milan, she had worked with Gio Ponti, who later remarked that she was “earning a place in modern architecture.” Bo Bardi and her husband, Italian art dealer and curator Pietro Maria Bardi, were members of the Communist party and found a safe haven in Brazil, which Bo Bardi called “an unimaginable country, where everything was possible.” The couple was integral in the establishment of the São Paolo Museum of Art (1968), which Bo Bardi designed with four bright-red exterior columns supporting the concrete-and-glass building suspended aboveground. Bo Bardi, who died in 1992, also designed the couple’s residence, a modern villa above São Paulo called the Glass House, now part of the Lina Bo and P.M. Bardi Institute. Though still somewhat overlooked by the modern design cognoscenti, Bo Bardi is revered by many modernists for both her architecture and bold furniture designs.
To see images of her work, please visit the slideshow.





her works are amazing, everyday that I pass in front of MASP, here in SP, I have to stop and look.... is really ahead her time :>
I appreciate so much the pictures of how it looked whan built and now; always, but esp. the pix in Bo Bardi! thanx
Excellent! One of my favorite Dwell slideshows, ever. Who wouldn't want to live in that jungle house with the hammock chairs or wander the medieval-modern walkways and turret of Fábrica da Pompéia? Love to see more on women in modern architecture, too. Well done, all around.
Sweet! Her stuff looks incredible, but it's structurally frail, I reckon. Also, the furniture is unbelievably uncomfortable :) I still love Lina Bo. Will post a link. Thanks!
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