Marc Sadler

French but born in Austria, Marc Sadler has lived and worked as a designer in France, the United States, Asia and Italy.

One of the first people to graduate in “esthétique industrielle” from ENSAD in Paris with a dissertation on plastics, he was a pioneer in experimentation with materials and contamination between technologies, which have become distinctive features of his work.

In the early ‘70s he developed the first ski boot made from completely recyclable thermoplastic, which was then industrialised by Italian producer Caber.

Today, thanks to his eclecticism, he is a consultant to companies in all industrial sectors.

4-times  winner of the Compasso d'Oro ADI, the Associazione Design Industriale, (1994, 2001, 2008 and 2014) his work has received many international awards over the years.

Marc Sadler

French but born in Austria, Marc Sadler has lived and worked as a designer in France, the United States, Asia and Italy.

One of the first people to graduate in “esthétique industrielle” from ENSAD in Paris with a dissertation on plastics, he was a pioneer in experimentation with materials and contamination between technologies, which have become distinctive features of his work.

In the early ‘70s he developed the first ski boot made from completely recyclable thermoplastic, which was then industrialised by Italian producer Caber.

Today, thanks to his eclecticism, he is a consultant to companies in all industrial sectors.

4-times  winner of the Compasso d'Oro ADI, the Associazione Design Industriale, (1994, 2001, 2008 and 2014) his work has received many international awards over the years.

MARC SADLER FOR ERNESTOMEDA

Defined by Marc Sadler himself as a ”multifaceted” project; the  CARRÈ, kitchen, designed in 2010, was characterised by a handle dug into the door; a programme intended for  lacquered finishes. There were so many combinations of colours and materials in the handles, worktops and doors that a vast range of compositions became possible. Sadler gave a touch of uniqueness to every interior, making it a pictorial artwork in its own right.

 

Marc Sadler

“If I had to describe Carré in a single word, I would choose “multifaceted”, the best adjective for explaining its polyhedral character.”