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Lazada
Designed by Le Corbusier
Applique de Marseille, designed by Le Corbusier in 1938/1939 for his Parisian flat in Rue Nungesser et Coli, provides direct and diffused light: two cone-shaped lampshades orient the light upwards and downwards, providing uniform and sharp light beams.
Variation
$800.00
The first wall lamp designed by Le Corbusier in 1925, originally thought to enlighten the large windows of Villa La Roche, a manifesto of purist architecture. Nemo edits La Roche enhancing its lightness and functionality: a matte metal frame and an opal glass diffuser for soft lighting.
$20,940.00
Designed by Le Corbusier in 1951/52 for the public spaces of the Unit? d?Habitation in Marseille, Escargot is only available in a limited edition, enhanced by its unique sculptural form inspired by nature. Made of burnished brass with an internal reflector for a diffused indirect lighting effect.
$340.00
Between 1951 and 1957, Le Corbusier designed the Sanskar Kendra Museum, a museum in the Indian city of Ahmedabad. The spiral shaped building contains all the fundamentals of his architecture. For this project, in 1954 Le Corbusier conceived a lighting system he named ?Projecteur?, installed in the structure to maximise the lighting effect
$1,730.00
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 […]
$1,040.00
A symbol in the history of design, spaghetti is the first Alias chair to appear in the MoMA collection of New York. The Spaghetti chair is an excellent example of material and formal simplicity that multiplies, in its many variants, the opportunities for use.
$630.00
$4,730.00
Initially introduced back in 1938, Little Petra won instant praise at the Copenhagen Cabinetmakers Guild Exhibition, subsequently winning awards at exhibits in New York and Berlin. It’s one of just a few designs by architect Viggo Boesen, who became associated with Denmark’s signature design aesthetic in the 1930s called funkis style. Little Petra is surprisingly […]
$420.00
Inspired by traditional Japanese rice paper lanterns, these additions allow you to take the series into all corners of the home ? from bedside to the entry, kitchen to the reading room.