Designed by Le Corbusier
Lampe de Marseille was named after the Unit? d?Habitation in Marseille, the massive building designed between 1949 and 1952 by Le Corbusier and a symbol of Brutalist architecture.
Variation
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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.
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In 1952, on the shores of the French Riviera, Le Corbusier built ‘Cabanon’: the absolute archetype of essential living. The project, executed according to the rules of the Modulor, is found just a stone?s throw away from the sea and served as a refuge for the architect in his final years. Lampe Cabanon, named after […]
$1,800
Iota borrows its name and shape from the Greek alphabet. A return to the essentials of language, a timeless dialogue. On a table, a console, a desk, the finesse of the object is revealed when the light caresses this radicalness.
Graphic and playful table lamp made with an particulated arm and body in matt black metal. The two-tone lampshade with matt white interior creates a diffused light and provides the possibility of reducing the intensity of the light in the upper part thanks to the light bulb cover with the hat closure.
$1,000
Inspired by geometric shapes and mathematical objects, Armen is a game of imbrication and balance between two simple forms: the cone and the sphere. Like the eponymous lighthouse, the light is guided by the three cones.
In 1949 Le Corbusier conceived Applique d?entr?e des appartments, a wall lamp of curved metal sheet to enlighten the entrances of the Unit? d?Habitation in Marseille, the housing unit symbol of the Modern Movement in its architectural and urbanistic conception. The Master designed the paradigm of the wall lamp, giving it the maximum efficiency while […]