PrimoPiano Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
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Toni Zuccheri Membrana Ceiling Lamp in Murano Glass by Venini 1960s Italy
By Venini, Toni Zuccheri
Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
Ceiling or Hanging lamp from the 'Membrane' series, designed by Toni Zuccheri and created between 1966 and 1968 by the famous Italian company Venini.
The lamp presents a round sha...
Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
Materials
Metal
Stilnovo Chandelier with Lampshades in Opaline Glass Italian Manufacture 1970s
By Stilnovo
Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
Chandelier with three lampshades in opaline glass and a structure in enameled and nickel-plated metal.
Manufactured by Stilnovo in 1970s Italy.
Stilnovo was an important lighting c...
Category
Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
Materials
Metal
Gaetano Missaglia Ceiling Lamp with Lampshades in Lucite Plexiglass 1970s Italy
By Gaetano Missaglia
Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
Mid-Century Modern ceiling lamp with five lampshades in chromed metal and lucite plexiglass.
Designed by Gaetano Missaglia and manufactured in Italy during the 1970s.
Acrylic, also known as the brand names lucite or Plexiglas, was developed in the 1930s. Its scientific name is Poly(methyl methacrylate), or PMMA, and it is a type of thermoplastic, which is a plastic Material that is moldable at extremely hot temperatures and solid once cool.
The company that created acrylic licensed it in two ways; first as Plexiglas to be a glass replacement, and afterwards as lucite for commercial uses in 1937. Commercially, lucite was used in jewelry, handbags, and cosmetics packaging. Plexiglas, in comparison, was often used for larger projects, such as aircraft windows, lenses for lighthouses, and aquariums.
Before it was used widespread for furniture, acrylic was being utilized for military purposes, as wartime was quickly approaching. During World War 2 (1939-1945), the country’s resources were mostly directed to military uses, and acrylic was no different. Acrylic, as Plexiglas, was used to help the military, including as airplane windshields and submarine periscopes.
Despite that, some people began using acrylic to make furniture. In 1939, Helena Rubinstein, a wildly successful cosmetics mogul and art collector, commissioned to Ladislas Medgyesan an entire suite of acrylic furnishings for her NYC apartment, including an illuminated acrylic bed in her bedroom and acrylic chairs for business meetings.
When the war ended in 1945, acrylic was ready to be worked with in design on a larger scale. The company licensed lucite widely, making it much more available across every industry. It steadily gained momentum in the world of design, with artists and designers being inspired by its moldability and translucense. In 1959, French designer Erwine Laverne told a New York Times reporter, “The most important element in rooms is people, not furniture,” speaking to the growing popularity and importance of the clear furniture.
But acrylic furniture hit its peak popularity in the 1960s and ‘70s, as more acrylic furniture designers and artists entered the scene. Glass artists began to take more of an interest in acrylics, especially taking advantage of acrylic’s flexibility, light weight, cost, and capacity to refract and filter light. Designers like John Mascheroni and Charles Hollis Jones, known as the Godfather of lucite, created iconic pieces that still look beautiful in today’s modern home.
Designers and artists alike loved the durability and look of acrylic. As Charles Hollis Jones put in an interview with Ravelin Magazine,
“I worked a lot with lucite when I first started. When I worked with the company that wanted me to go to Europe, they had me work with glass, ceramic, enamel. I went over there and the glass was always in the wrong color and it always broke. When the earthquakes came, I got visual proof of that. I like to work with acrylic because it does two wonderful things that glass doesn’t. It’s shatter-proof, first of all. I can also change the microstructure and make it one-tenth the strength of steel. And the most important thing it does: it carries light. Glass reflects light. lucite holds it and carries it. If you play with it, you can make a lens to look at something in space. It’s that good. It’s purer than crystal.”
In fact, acrylic was often used in chandeliers as well, mixed with other materials to make incredible striking designs that would have been much more difficult to achieve with glass.
Recently, acrylic furniture has once again risen in popularity. While many of the designs are timeless, more designers are coming forward with acrylic furniture for the modern home. In 2002, designer Philippe Starck introduced his Louis Ghost Chair, and the trend has only grown from there.
You’ll now find entirely acrylic pieces of home furnishings and accessories, as well as acrylic-detailed furniture all across the market. With so many designs, options, and knock-offs all across the market, we at clear home design...
Category
Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
Materials
Metal
Elio Martinelli Step Chandelier in Black Lacquered Metal by Martinelli Luce 70s
By Martinelli Luce, Elio Martinelli
Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
A rare ceiling lamp or chandelier (model Step) with a semisphere lampshade in black lacquered aluminum, it was designed by Elio Martinelli and produced by the Italian company, Martinelli Luce during the 1970s.
The concentric shapes repeated in a precise sequence, from which the Step lamp is structured, reveal an attitude of the designer in search of geometric essentiality. It is a lamp characterized by simple and functional lines in which all the elements are inserted into each other reducing to a disk a few centimeters high, with closing system and telescopic opening. Its particular metal lamellar structure recalls some of the most famous lamps by Alvar Aalto and the hexagonal lamp designed in 1959 by Bruno Munare for Danese.
Literature: Emiliana Martinelli, Elio Martinelli e Martinelli...
Category
Vintage 1970s Italian Post-Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
Materials
Metal, Aluminum
Elio Martinelli Step Chandelier in White Lacquered Metal by Martinelli Luce 70s
By Martinelli Luce, Elio Martinelli
Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
A rare ceiling lamp or chandelier (model Step) with a semisphere lampshade in white lacquered aluminum, it was designed by Elio Martinelli and produced by the Italian company, Martinelli Luce during the 1970s.
The concentric shapes repeated in a precise sequence, from which the Step lamp is structured, reveal an attitude of the designer in search of geometric essentiality. It is a lamp characterized by simple and functional lines in which all the elements are inserted into each other reducing to a disk a few centimeters high, with closing system and telescopic opening. Its particular metal lamellar structure recalls some of the most famous lamps by Alvar Aalto and the hexagonal lamp designed in 1959 by Bruno Munare for Danese.
Literature: Emiliana Martinelli, Elio Martinelli e Martinelli...
Category
Vintage 1970s Italian Post-Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
Materials
Metal
Achille & Pier Giacomo Castglioni KD6 Hanging Lamp for Kartell 1959 Italy
By Achille & Pier Giacomo Castiglioni, Kartell
Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
The hanging lamp model "KD 6” was designed by the brothers Castiglioni and was among the first lamps produced by the famous Italian company Kartell.
KD 6 lamp ...
Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
Materials
Brass
Tobia Scarpa Nictea Pendant Lamp in Nickel-Plated Brass by Flos 1960s
By Flos, Tobia Scarpa
Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
Nictea pendant lamp in nickel-plated brass, and glass was designed by Tobia Scarpa in 1961 and produced by Flos.
The Nictea lamp gives filtered and concentrated light thanks to the ...
Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
Materials
Brass, Nickel
Pendant Lamp with Five Elements in Opaline Glass by Stilnovo 1960s Italy
By Stilnovo
Located in Montecatini Terme, IT
Pendant lamp with structure in lacquered metal and brass and five diffusers in opaline glass.
This lamp was manufactured by the Italian company Stilnovo during the 1960s.
Stilnovo w...
Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
Materials
Brass, Metal
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Postmodern Vertebrae Floor Lamp by Elio Martinelli for Martinelli Luce
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1980s Postmodern Vertebrae floor lamp by Elio Martinelli
Flex floor lamp, also known as Vertebrae, Model 2164 by Elio Martinelli for Martinelli Luce.
The lamp is full flexible with swivel shade.
Organic shape of the flexible arm is similar to a human spine.
First designed for the Turin exhibition 1970.
metal base and bracket, "backbone" body movable in both rotation and bending,
Condition: Good working order, minor scratches to hood and some cracks (Please see pictures)
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Normal cap into E27 / Max. 100W.
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Italian Mid-Century Large Stilnovo Opaline Glass and Brass Pendant Light , 1970s
By Stilnovo
Located in Morazzone, Varese
Gorgeous large pendant light with stunning opaline glass Made in Italy by Stilnovo.
The opaline glass is in very good condition, and much better in person as on the pictures. The lig...
Category
Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
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H 29.53 in Dm 21.66 in
Taraxacum hanging lamp by Achille & Pier Giacomo Castiglioni for Flos, 1960s
By Flos, Achille & Pier Giacomo Castiglioni
Located in bruxelles, BE
Metal and resin suspension lamp designed by Achille & Pier Giacomo Castiglioni in the 1960s. Model: Taraxacum Maximum height with cable: 100 cm. Wear due to time and age of the lamp....
Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
Materials
Metal
$5,241
H 19.69 in Dm 25.2 in
Large Midcentury Murano Chandelier by Toni Zuccheri for Venini
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Category
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Chandelier Glass Bark "Corteccia" Model Design Toni Zuccheri for Venini, 1960s
By Venini, Toni Zuccheri
Located in taranto, IT
splendid original Venini chandelier, design Toni Zuccheri, made with tri-lobed Murano glass bark-worked glass in transparent and caramel shades
composed of 16 glasses 25 cm long and 6 shorter, the latter positioned in the central part
measures just under 50...
Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Chandeliers and Pendants
Materials
Metal
$4,425
H 19.69 in W 19.69 in D 15.75 in
Venini Mid-Century Modern Grey Murano Glass Chandelier by Toni Zuccheri, 1980
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Located in Murano, Venezia
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FOR SHIPPING, REQUEST US FOR RECEIVE THE BEST PR...
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"Saliscendi" Pendant Lamp by Elio Martinelli for Martinelli Luce, Italy, 1970s
By Elio Martinelli, Martinelli Luce
Located in Milan, IT
Saliscendi pendant lamp by Elio Martinelli pfr Martinelli Luce.
The latch system is hidden by the upper spherical element, giving a sinuous diffused shape.
The adjustable system is c...
Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Chandeliers and Pendants
Materials
Metal
$2,306
H 19.69 in Dm 19.69 in
10-light Murano Glass "Tronchi" Chandelier Toni Zuccheri For Venini, 1960s
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Vintage 1960s Italian Chandeliers and Pendants
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