


Tobia Scarpa was born into the rich cultural context of Venice, the son of architect Carlo Scarpa, and the nephew to a prominent painter in the 1930s and ’40s. Surrounded by artists, architects, and intellectuals, he absorbed a sensitivity to material and form from an early age. At IUAV University of Venice, one of the first architecture schools in Italy, he met Afra Bianchin, and together they began exploring how design could respond not just to function, but to feeling. Their early work already revealed a dual sensibility: his poetic curiosity, her structural precision.
Afra and Tobia established their studio in 1960 and worked together almost until her death. Over five prolific decades, they created more than 400 designs from furniture and lighting to industrial architecture, private homes, retail interiors, and museum installations. They approached architecture and design as equal and equivalent, letting the lessons of one inform the other and treating every project with the same intensity of focus and creative experimentation. In partnership with GUBI, Scarpa revisits a classic 1970s design co-created with Afra - the Elogio modular sofa system - refining it to meet the needs of modern lifestyles and introducing a new generation to one of the most distinctive design visions to emerge in the last century.
Elogio is the result of a journey of technological and formal experimentation, which the Scarpas also developed through its predecessors, such as the Erasmo sofa, created a year earlier. While maintaining the anthropometric approach to proportion and the balance between structure and softness, Elogio adopts a lower, more grounded profile. GUBI’s edition remains true to the 1974 edition, subtly updated through refined materials, internal construction, upholstery, and proportions, ensuring the sofa meets contemporary standards of comfort and craftsmanship.