Last year I already had the chance to see a glimpse of the new collection in Copenhagen and when recently strolling through the catalogue of
I am still working on my
I love beautiful shaped lamps with dimmers in the corners of a space, on a cabinet or on the floor with a beautiful wall behind. No wonder I not only fell in love with the different objects and the new furniture pieces, I can really see the Bull lamp adding a beautiful statement to my home and please bring the pedestal along! While most retailers are closed at the moment or offer private shopping you can also shop all items online in the
Kyoto
For this blogpost I collected some of my favourites of the moment and being a collector of beautiful shaped objects the Kyoto vases pictured above immediately caught my eye! Inspired by sculptural shapes of ancient Japanese and Chinese vases, Kyoto is designed as a cross of four massive walls, lifting up an oval shaped sphere. The vase has a circular opening in the middle, characterised by the unfinished meeting between the four walls. Kyoto is made from fiber concrete and comes in two sizes.
Osaka
Another love at first sight spotted last year during
Oka Tray
With it’s sculptural and architectural shapes the Oka Tray brings character into any interior scheme. The tray is cast in solid fiber concrete, adding a certain heaviness to the brutalistic object, while also creating a unique and refined surface texture.
Bull Lamp
The Bull lamp is a sculptural lamp, inspired by the characteristic use of animal pictures in Danish Modernism from 1940s to 1960s. The lamp is named after its bull like lampshades of opal glass, which gives a smooth light scattering and a characteristic expression. Both available as a table lamp or standing lamp as pictured below.
Brutalist
Brutalist is a sculptural table lamp made from cast lightweight concrete with a hidden light source. The lamp is named after the architectural style Brutalism, and is inspired by architectural masterpieces by Le Corbusier and Frank Lloyd Wright. Brutalist consists of merged geometric shapes, where the composition of elements reflects the need to both hide and maximize the light source. The contrasting concrete material creates a nuanced surface, which beautifully reflects the adjustable light source
Brutus collection
The Brutus collection is inspired by the architectural Brutalism movement of the mid 20th century. Each style is designed as a simplified block-like structure, which reminisces architectural building components of concrete. Brutus also refers to the Roman Empire, founders of classic architectural geometry. Material fiber concrete