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PANORAMMMA

PANORAMMMA

Panorammma is a design practice that oscillates between disciplines while addressing a central tension of contemporary life: alienation, abstraction, and the growing distance between human experience and the built world. Rather than producing autonomous objects destined for contemplation alone, the studio creates pieces meant to be lived with, objects that exist fully within everyday rituals. Rooted in memory and imagined futures, Panorammma constructs new visual narratives where past experiences and personal histories are reactivated through form. The work explores how domestic objects can disrupt routine, inserting moments of fiction into the real and opening subtle fissures where imagination can unfold.

Panorammma’s objects demand engagement. They are activated through use, sat upon, touched, switched on and off, shared in daily gestures. Through this intimacy, the objects shape behavior while being shaped by it in return.

Founded during confinement by designer and director Maika Palazuelos, Panorammma emerged as an open and permeable platform for design exploration. Initially conceived as an extension of Palazuelos’ artistic practice, the studio identifies expressive domestic objects as powerful agents capable of infiltrating everyday life. These pieces operate as quiet provocations, almost Trojan horses, embedding artistic discourse within the mundane. Through their presence and performative nature, they transform domestic spaces into unusual scenarios, refusing the neutrality of ordinary living. Panorammma’s objects function as actors rather than props, creating scenographies drawn from parallel fictions. Neither purely functional nor symbolic, they exist in a state of productive ambiguity, inviting altered ways of inhabiting space. In this tension between use and imagination, Panorammma proposes design as an active, emotional, and narrative force, one that resists passivity and insists on lived experience.