Designed by Bernard Schottlander
Bernard Schottlander was inspired by the praying mantis to create this intruiging and gracious wall lamp. His prototype was done in small size. We have decided to publish it.
Finishes:
Adjustable shade and stem, structure in steel and shade in aluminium in black
Dimensions:
W715 x D272 x H400 mm
Wattage:
3W, Built in LED
$1,840
As admirer of Alexander Calder, in 1951 Schottlander created the Mantis series of lamps. Movement is intrinsic to all of Schottlander’s work: an artist, an engineer and in no small measure a handyman, he devised a clever system of counterweights combined with a series of strong, and flexible metal bars. The shade also is unique […]
$1,970
$2,020
A silhouette that naturally evokes a praying mantis in weightlessness, the Mantis floor lamp has now been structurally tweaked and improved just as designer Schottlander envisioned in his time. Still composed of a long steel rod topped by a black shade pivoting on a ball joint, resting on its round base, the BS8 L floor […]
$970
$13,060
$0
Designed by Le Corbusier in 1963 for the Parliament in Chandigarh in India, Parliament is a symbol of 1950s modernism, inspired by the industrial lighting of the time. The adjustable diffuser consists of two open symmetrical cones for direct and indirect lighting. The finishes reflect the ?claviers de couleurs? colour system developed by the Swiss-French […]
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Realised in 1979, Kuta expresses Magistretti?s constant quest to combine simplicity and geometric rigour with an evocative lighting effect of lights and shadows.
An avant-garde icon of the 1950s, Pivotante ? Poser was conceived by Charlotte Perriand as an architectural element. The light emission interacts with the material texture, volumes, dimensions and graphic signs created by the two rotating diffusers, which allow both closing and opening of the light beam for direct or indirect light.