Radical Design as a Critical Practice

A lecture within the Critical Histories of Furniture Design course (Politecnico di Milano × WRTH)

What if furniture could speak—and challenge the way we live?
As part of the Critical Histories of Furniture Design course, one of the core modules within the Politecnico di Milano × وِرث | wrth (Riyadh) Master in Heritage-based Furniture Design Program, students and WRTH colleagues joined a special session exploring Radical Design and why it still matters today.
We were delighted to welcome two Italian speakers invited by Prof. Beatrice Bianco: Franco Audrito, founder of Studio65 s.r.l and Maria Cristina Didero, international design curator.

Through personal stories and iconic projects, they reflected on how furniture can become a messenger, carrying social, political, and cultural narratives far beyond pure function.
From expressive forms to unexpected materials, the lecture reframed Radical Design not as a chapter of the past, but as an ongoing critical attitude, one that uses irony, storytelling, and collective practice to question how we live, behave, and assign value to objects.

Key takeaways from the session included:

·      Design as storytelling — objects are never neutral
·      Material innovation as language — new materials open new meanings
·      Irony with seriousness — playfulness as a form of critique
·      Craft and collaboration — design as a shared, collective process
Thanks again to Franco, Maria Cristina, and Prof. Beatrice for an inspiring and thought-provoking contribution to the course. And thanks to وِرث | wrth for the technical support, and to Sana Alabdulwahed for documenting the session through photography.