Gianfranco Frattini was an Italian architect and designer, and one of the leading figures of the generation that shaped Italian design from the mid-1950s through the 1960s. After graduating in architecture from the Politecnico di Milano, he worked in the studio of Gio Ponti before establishing his own practice in Milan in 1953, focusing on architecture, interiors, and industrial design. Beginning in 1954, Frattini developed a close and long-standing collaboration with Cassina, while also working with leading Italian and international manufacturers including Bernini, Acerbis, Fantoni, Artemide, Knoll, and Lema. His work combined modernist rigor with refined technical solutions, with particular attention to materials, joinery, and the relationship between craftsmanship and industrial production. Deeply attentive to the relationship between light, space, and atmosphere, Frattini conceived interiors as cohesive spatial environments in which architecture, furniture, and lighting formed an integrated whole.