Foscarini Madre Table Lamp
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- Regular price
- $1,885
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- Regular price
- $1,885
- Sale price
- $1,885
- Unit price
- per
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Madre is a poetic and unexpected object filled with references. The opening, which interrupts the large luminous body, creates a magical vision, where internal and external light are exchanged and merge together, while the upper hollow conceals a vase, in which to place branches to create an elegant composition.
Dimensions
Diameter: 35 cm
Height: 36 cm
Materials
Varnished aluminium and polycarbonate
Borosilicate glass
Blown satin glass
Andrea Anastasio
After completing his studies in philosophy, Andrea Anastasio embarked upon a cultural path that led him to cooperate on projects entailing the cataloguing of Islamic architecture in India, research on innovation in traditional craftsmanship techniques, partnerships with architectural practices, publishers and museums.
Fascinated by the study of the poetics of conceptual art and its potential convergences with industrial design, he designs furniture and objects for Italian companies that play a leading role on the international scene. His research focuses on the manipulation of objects, consumer goods and domestic materials, to generate cross-contaminations of languages and meanings, such as in the Filo lamp, a project he coined for Foscarini.
After completing his studies in philosophy, Andrea Anastasio embarked upon a cultural path that led him to cooperate on projects entailing the cataloguing of Islamic architecture in India, research on innovation in traditional craftsmanship techniques, partnerships with architectural practices, publishers and museums.
Fascinated by the study of the poetics of conceptual art and its potential convergences with industrial design, he designs furniture and objects for Italian companies that play a leading role on the international scene. His research focuses on the manipulation of objects, consumer goods and domestic materials, to generate cross-contaminations of languages and meanings, such as in the Filo lamp, a project he coined for Foscarini.