Rare Version Arredoluce Triennale mod. 14028 / Angelo Lelii , Lampada da terra
About the Item
- Creator:Angelo Lelii (Designer),Arredoluce (Designer)
- Design:
- Dimensions:Height: 75 in (190.5 cm)Width: 40 in (101.6 cm)Depth: 40 in (101.6 cm)
- Power Source:Plug-in
- Voltage:110-150v
- Lampshade:Included
- Style:Mid-Century Modern (Of the Period)
- Materials and Techniques:
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:1960s
- Condition:Wear consistent with age and use.
- Seller Location:Buffalo, NY
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU1062439806582
Angelo Lelii
Angelo Lelii’s energetic and imaginative floor lamps, sconces and chandeliers often reflected his singular personality — whimsical but practical. He is responsible for some of the most delightfully eye-pleasing but functional works in the history of Italian mid-century modern lighting design.
Lelii was born Paolo Angelo Lelii in the seaport town of Ancona and moved to Milan when he was quite young. Not much is known about his early life — online resources frequently have his last name misspelled “Lelli” — except that he studied at the Superior Institute of Industrial Art in nearby Monza.
While there was no shortage of pioneering work being done in the field of mid-century modern lighting design, Lelii was a visionary whose dream was to create technologically advanced lighting that embodied the simple lines of modern design but would be defined by his own imaginative twists. In 1943, Lelii opened his first workshop in a tiny basement in Monza, under the name Arredoluce. A few years later, he designed the single-light, bent-arm Tris floor lamp. Later that year, he exhibited his Triennale floor lamp at the Milan Triennale VIII and garnered wide acclaim. This iconic, slender lamp features three adjustable arms with enameled aluminum shades.
Lelii’s sculptural fixtures in brass and cast iron appeared in the acclaimed design journal Domus, and he embarked on high-profile collaborations with Italian modernist legends such as Gio Ponti — a giant of architecture and design as well as a founder of Domus — Memphis Group member Ettore Sottsass Jr. and the brothers Castiglioni (formally known as Achille, Pier Giacomo and Livio).
Massive success followed for Arredoluce from the late 1950s and into the 1960s. For Lelii, there was his seminal Stella ceiling lamp, featuring opaque, acid-etched glass globe shades; his minimalist Cobra table lamp, which was one of the world’s first low voltage light fixtures; and his aptly named Eye floor lamp. Lelii continued to oversee design and production at his revolutionary lighting firm until his death in 1979.
Find vintage Angelo Lelii lighting on 1stDibs.
Arredoluce
The lighting company Arredoluce opened in 1943, at the start of a golden era of modernist Italian design, and was born of the confluence of an eager entrepreneurial business spirit and a fresh, innovative, forward-looking creative atmosphere.
Angelo Lelii (1911–79), the founder of Arredoluce, which was based in the Milanese district of Monza, was a gifted and at times brilliant designer. He had the insight to commission works from other greats of the day, including Gio Ponti, Vico Magistretti, the brothers Achille and Pier Giacomo Castiglioni and Ettore Sottsass Jr.
Lelii’s designs cover a broad aesthetic range. His most famous work, the Triennale floor lamp (circa 1947), is both elegant and practical, with three omnidirectional lighting booms attached to a central pole. His well-known ceiling light of 1954 — in which a conical canister bounces light upward off a lighting-arced enameled-aluminum sheet — is a piece of design poetry. And his 1962 Cobra table lamp has a wild, almost Surrealist look, featuring a sculptured rod of polished metal with a socket that, like his Eye floor lamp of the early 1960s, holds an eyeball-like directional bulb.
Arredoluce also placed few constraints on the creativity of the designers it employed from outside the company. The Castiglioni brothers’ Tubino table lamp of 1951, for example, is a remarkably early example of minimalist design. The company both fostered the tradition-minded aspect of Ponti’s sensibility and produced several of his experimental pieces in Lucite in the 1950s; and Sottsass’s UFO table lamp of 1957, a sandwich of two plastic bubbled tablets on four legs, prefigures the look of his postmodern works for the Memphis Group by more than 20 years.
From the stylish and utilitarian to the avant-garde, vintage Arredoluce floor lamps, table lamps, chandeliers and other lighting includes some of the most diverse, remarkable — and collectible — designs of the late 20th century.
- ShippingRetrieving quote...Ships From: Buffalo, NY
- Return PolicyThis item cannot be returned.
- Triennale Polished Chrom Floor Lamp Arredoluce, Triennale Angelo Lelli, ItalyBy Angelo Lelii, ArredoluceLocated in Buffalo, NYAn iconic floor lamp designed by Angelo Lelli for Arredoluce, first exhibited at the Triennale Exposition in Milan in 1951. The Triennale is a sculptural lighting design with tighte...Category
Vintage 1950s Italian Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
- Classic Modernist 'Trienali" 3-Arm Articulating Lamp by Angelo Lelli / ItalyBy Arteluce, Angelo LeliiLocated in Buffalo, NYMid-Century Modern triple arm floor lamp designed by Angelo Lelli, made in Italy, Classic version, white cone shades. Chrome standard, Leather wr...Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
MaterialsMarble, Chrome
- Modernist Triennale Floor Lamp by Gerald Thurston for LightolierBy Gerald Thurston, LightolierLocated in Buffalo, NYBeautiful and extremely well made three shade floor lamp designed by Gerald Thurston for Lightolier. Made of brass and black painted metal, each shade retains its original metal swir...Category
Mid-20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
MaterialsMetal, Brass
- Early Version Walter Von Nessen swing out floor lampBy Walter Von NessenLocated in Buffalo, NYOne of the purest examples I have ever owned..Early and rare version of the now iconic Machine Age Nessen swing arm floor lamp. This lamp r...Category
Vintage 1930s American Art Deco Floor Lamps
MaterialsStainless Steel
- Stunning Modernist Floor Lamp by TYE of California / Angelo TestaBy TYE of California, Angelo TestaLocated in Buffalo, NYStunning modernist floor lamp by Tye of California / Angelo Testa, Classic midcentury iron tripod base, wonderful large ceramic pottery ball with Angelo T...Category
Vintage 1950s American Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
MaterialsIron
- Rare Moss Triple Shade Acrylic / Lucite Floor Lamp, classic mid century modernBy Moss Lamp Co. 1Located in Buffalo, NYRare Moss Triple Shade Acrylic / Lucite Floor Lamp, classic mid century modern, Almost oriental in design (pagoda shades) Amazing original condition,, a true survivor.. Three layere...Category
Vintage 1950s American Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
MaterialsAcrylic, Fiberglass, Lucite
- Angelo Lelii for Arredoluce Triennale Floor LampBy Angelo Lelii, ArredoluceLocated in Chicago, ILAngelo Lelii for Arredoluce Triennale Floor Lamp, model 12128 Italy, 1947 An original Brass frame on a tripod base with painted shades of enameled steel adjustable handles impressed ...Category
Vintage 1950s Italian Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
MaterialsBrass, Aluminum
- Angelo Lelii for Arredoluce Model 12128 Triennale Floor Lamp Brass & WhiteBy Angelo Lelii, ArredoluceLocated in Hanover, MAArredoluce "Triennale" solid brass floor lamp model 12128 designed by Angelo Lelii in 1947, produced in 1954. One owner. 100% original. Nothing replaced nor added. Fully functioning....Category
Vintage 1940s Italian Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
MaterialsAluminum, Brass
- Rara Piantana Arredoluce Triennale by Angello LeliiBy Arredoluce, Angelo LeliiLocated in Rovereta, SMAngelo Lelli per Arredoluce, lampada da terra Triennale, ottone n. l, Italia, circa 1953. Questa lampada iconica è stata progettata da Angello Lelii per ...Category
Mid-20th Century Italian Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
MaterialsBrass
- Angelo Lelii for Arredoluce Floor LampBy Angelo Lelii, ArredoluceLocated in Philadelphia, PAAngleo Lelii for Arredoluce multi-eye ball adjustable floor lamp. Early 1970s design, three separate chrome ball lights that can be positioned in many configurations by the use of ma...Category
Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
MaterialsMarble, Metal, Chrome
- Arredoluce Floor Lamp Mod 12705 by Angelo LeliiBy Angelo LeliiLocated in Saint-Ouen, IDFMidcentury floor lamp designed by Angelo Lelii and made by Arredoluce in 1958. This model 12705 is made of a brass curved foot, vertical stem and screws, and two molded opaline glass shades covering the ten sources of light. Original light switch with the maker’s stamp. Angelo Lelli (1911-1989) Angelo Lelli was the founder of Arredoluce, an Italian company specialized in lighting editions active from 1947 to 1987. He was born in 1911 in the Ancona region but moved with his family to the north of Italy to pursue his studies at ISIA (Superior Institute of Industrial Art) at the University of Decorative Arts in Monza, outside Milan. It was in Monza also where as early as 1939 he started working out of a small basement workshop, producing lamps and chandelier designs with clean lines, strong attention to detail, and applying the newest technologies. After having his work interrupted by the War, in 1946 three of his designs were featured in Domus Magazine. Arredoluce was founded in 1947, in Monza, by Angelo Lelli. Over the following decades, the company’s collaborators included renowned designers such as Giò Ponti, Ettore Sottsass, Pier Giacomo, and Achille Castiglioni. The most well-known designs of Angelo Lelii are the Triennale floor lamp model...Category
Vintage 1950s Italian Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
MaterialsBrass
- 20th Century, Angelo Lelii for Arredoluce Floor Lamp mod. 14102 ZodiacBy Angelo Lelii, ArredoluceLocated in Turin, TurinAngelo Lelii became an influential designer in postwar Italy, especially in the field of modern lighting design. In the 1947 He founded Arredoluce, a premier manufacturer of fornitur...Category
Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
MaterialsMetal, Steel