O-Luce DIM Floor Lamp Aluminium Metal Italy 1970s
Features
Designer: Vico Magistretti
Production: O-Luce
Model: Dim
Time: 1970s
Production country: Milano, Lombardia, Italy
Material: Enamelled aluminum , Chromed Metal , Metallic Enamelled
Description
Floor lamp with reflected light with adjustable intensity and adjustable position diffuser. Enamelled metal and aluminum and chromed metal.
Product Condition:
Lamp in good condition, has small signs of wear. We try to present the real state of the lamps as fully as possible with photos. If some details are not clear from the photos, what is stated in the description applies.
Dimensions (cm):
Height: 203
Width: 17
Depth: 30
Additional Information
Designer: Vico Magistretti
Ludovico Magistretti (1920 - 2006) was an Italian designer and architect. Born into a middle-class Milanese family, Vico Magistretti attended the Parini classical high school and then enrolled in the Faculty of Architecture of the Royal Polytechnic of Milan, where leading figures in the architectural panorama of the time such as Gio Ponti and Piero Portaluppi taught. Between 1943 and 1944 he decided, like many intellectuals of the time, to leave his own country and moved to Switzerland where he was able to follow some academic courses. His acquaintance with Ernesto Nathan Rogers dates back to that period, and will remain in the architect's memory as a key person in his intellectual formation. In 1945 he returned to Milan, where he graduated in Architecture at the Polytechnic. In 1956 he was one of the founding members of ADI, the Association for Industrial Design. His latest design projects were presented at the Salone del Mobile in 2008. His design works are exhibited in the permanent collection of MOMA in New York and in other museums in America and Europe.Find out more about Ludovico Magistretti with our insights:
Eclisse, light according to Vico Magistretti a>
Maralunga, the seat in motion
Corner Mix n ° 9
Production: O-Luce
Founded in 1945 by Giuseppe Ostuni, master of art, Oluce is, in the lighting field, the oldest Italian design company still active. Before the world war, in fact, there was only Arteluce by Gino Sarfatti, which disappeared at the end of the 90s, Azucena and Lamperti were born in 1948, and Arredoluce and Stilnovo in 1950. However, it was above all Arteluce, Azucena and Oluce that focused, for many years, on the Italian panorama, establishing themselves as meeting centers for those designers who, strongly involved first with the reconstruction and then with the birth of mass production, animated the Milanese debate: Vittoriano Viganò and the BBPR, Gigi Caccia Dominioni and Ignazio Gardella, Marco Zanuso and finally Joe Colombo. Already in 1951 Oluce successfully participated in the IX Triennale. A great success was confirmed by Tito Agnoli with the mention of two lamps (the floor model 363 and a special model for bookcases) in the second edition of the Compasso d'Oro, in 1955. In 1956, two other reports followed in rapid sequence: for a very notable table lamp in polyvinyl with slats and for a pendant luminaire (mod. 4461) with double Perspex diffuser. Finally, it is essential to remember, in 1954, the 255/387 luminaire (called ''Agnoli''), a slender rod holding a spot, marking the end of lampshades and the adoption of very simplified floor lamps also in domestic lighting . Meanwhile, in 1963, in production since 1965, Marco Zanuso designed a forgotten masterpiece for Oluce, the model 275 table lamp with a large white Perspex diffuser that can be rotated on a lacquered metal base. In 1964/66, again from a material, the printed glass called ''Fresnel Lens'', with Joe Colombo, the family of ''Fresnel'' waterproof outdoor lamps with painted metal base and diffuser held by clips was born. 'steel. In 1967, however, Colombo was already further ahead and, with the ''Coupé'' model, preserved at the MoMA in New York, proposed a curved stem of considerable size to support a very elegant semi-cylindrical cap. In 1968, the Coupé won the ''International Design Award'' from the American Institute of Interior Designers in Chicago. Finally, in 1970, which went into production in 1972, one year after the premature death of Joe Colombo, the ''Halogen lamp'' was born, necessarily called ''Colombo'' ever since. In 2001, white Murano glass stones and cane rods transparent perspex populate the Oluce stand at Euroluce. Designed by Laudani&Romanelli and Ferdi Giardini, they propose a way of understanding design that goes beyond function to become poetry. Finally, Oki Sato, or Nendo, the most refined of the new Japanese designers, joins the Oluce team, first with ''Sorane'' and then with ''Switch''. But this is no longer the story of Oluce, but rather Oluce's contribution to contemporary design. -Time: 1970s
1970sMaterial:
Enamelled aluminum
Chromed Metal
Metallic Enamelled
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Approfondimenti
Se vuoi conoscere qualcosa in più sul mondo dell'illuminazione di modernariato, consulta gli approfondimenti del nostro blog:
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Esempi di abbinamento di lampade da terra di modernariato con altri arredi, su Corner MiX:
Corner MiX n.5
Corner MiX n.18
Consulta anche il nostro Catalogo illuminazione FineArt in cui puoi trovare lampade da terra di rara bellezza, come, per esempio:
Lampada LTE8 di Ignazio Gardella per Azucena
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Approfondimenti
Se vuoi conoscere qualcosa in più sul mondo dell'illuminazione di modernariato, consulta gli approfondimenti del nostro blog:Che cos'è il vetro opalino
Il lampadario Maria Teresa, un grande classico dell'illuminazione
Due epoche per un lampadario dal gusto unico
Lampadari Neoclassici Eleganti per Ricevimenti
Le Icone del design:
Lampada Arco: icona tra le icone
Esempi di abbinamento di lampade da terra di modernariato con altri arredi, su Corner MiX:
Corner MiX n.5
Corner MiX n.18
Consulta anche il nostro Catalogo illuminazione FineArt in cui puoi trovare lampade da terra di rara bellezza, come, per esempio:
Lampada LTE8 di Ignazio Gardella per Azucena
Lampada LTE10 Luigi Caccia Dominioni
Lampada "Excalibur" Ettore Fantasia e Gino Poli per Sothis
Lampada da terra 'Prisma LTE12', Ignazio Gardella per Azucena
Lampada da terra 'Polimnia', BBPR per Artemide
Lampada da Terra 'Ro' Studio BBPR
Coppia di Candelabri, Claude Francois Rabiat, Parigi, 1810 ca.
Sul modernariato in generale
From the Sixties to the Sixteenth Century – From the Sixteenth Century to the Sixties
Sedute design
Le sedute e la nascita del design
Sacco - la poltrona trasformista
Valigia - la lampada da viaggio
Pistillino - la natura che incontra il design
Eames lounge chair
Tizio by Artemide - l'equilibrio del movimento
Come dare un look mid century alla propria casa
Design scandinavo vs Design Italiano
Alla scoperta del modernariato
Product availability
The product can be seen at Cambiago
Immediate availability
Ready for delivery within 2 working days from ordering the product.