Triple Wall Light, Fontana Arte at ContemporaryLightingDecor.com
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Michelle Madler
ContemporaryLightingDecor.com
Los Angeles , CA
ContemporaryLightingDecor.com
Los Angeles , CA
Product Description
Designed by Steven Holl, Triple is a wall light with aluminum grey painted die-cast aluminum frame and white curved glass diffusers.
Lighting fixture bringing to mind vivid impressions of a close and fruitful relationship between learned, original creativity and a productive capacity open to innovation. A never interrupted relationship between the company and the architects that grew stronger and stronger and produces proposals and solutions capable to excite and to create the right balance between the human need of light and darkness.
A perfect addition to your modern lighting collection, with class and elegance. With its modern look and feel, it can easily complement your existing decor. This contemporary lighting focuses great attention on creativity and taste of innovation, out of the ordinary, and with highest care for details both of design and of functionality.
About the Designer
Steven Holl was born in 1947 in Bremerton, Washington DC. A 1969 graduate of the University of Washington, Steven Holl completed his post-graduate studies in Rome (1970) and at the Architecture Association School of Architecture in London (1976). Returning to New York that year, he established his independent practice. After a series of prototypical Urban studies, some of his small scale designs began to be realised. His work assumed its distinctive character with his Cohen apartment, New York (1984) and his Berkowitz house in Martha’s Vineyard (1987).
These works were featured, along with Holl’s award winning scheme for the AGB library in Berlin, in his 1989 two-man show at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. This exhibition consolidated Holl’s national and international reputation. There followed the Stretto house in Dallas, an extension of the Cranbrook institute of Science in Bloomfield hills, and the St. Ignatius Chapel in Seattle.
In 1993, Holl won the open competition for the Museum Of Contemporary Art in Helsinki and this, his largest work to date, was completed in May 1998. Holl’s phenomenological approach has always put a premium on constructional and structural inventiveness. This last is particularly evident in his unusual use of lift slab construction in realising the Seattle church. His prototypical regional megaform proposal for Texas known as Spiroid Sectors (1990) is typical of his theoretical work at the urban-landscape scale.
He has elaborated his philosophical position in a series of books: Anchoring (1989), Questions Of Perception (1994), and intertwining (1996). He has taught at Columbia Uni’s school of Architecture since 1976, where he is currently a tenured professor. In 1997 he received the New York AIA Medal of Honour and in 1998 the Alvar Aalto Medal. He has designed the Kiasma and Triple lamps for Fontana Arte.
Use coupon code DP10 and get 10% discount plus free shipping!
Lighting fixture bringing to mind vivid impressions of a close and fruitful relationship between learned, original creativity and a productive capacity open to innovation. A never interrupted relationship between the company and the architects that grew stronger and stronger and produces proposals and solutions capable to excite and to create the right balance between the human need of light and darkness.
A perfect addition to your modern lighting collection, with class and elegance. With its modern look and feel, it can easily complement your existing decor. This contemporary lighting focuses great attention on creativity and taste of innovation, out of the ordinary, and with highest care for details both of design and of functionality.
About the Designer
Steven Holl was born in 1947 in Bremerton, Washington DC. A 1969 graduate of the University of Washington, Steven Holl completed his post-graduate studies in Rome (1970) and at the Architecture Association School of Architecture in London (1976). Returning to New York that year, he established his independent practice. After a series of prototypical Urban studies, some of his small scale designs began to be realised. His work assumed its distinctive character with his Cohen apartment, New York (1984) and his Berkowitz house in Martha’s Vineyard (1987).
These works were featured, along with Holl’s award winning scheme for the AGB library in Berlin, in his 1989 two-man show at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. This exhibition consolidated Holl’s national and international reputation. There followed the Stretto house in Dallas, an extension of the Cranbrook institute of Science in Bloomfield hills, and the St. Ignatius Chapel in Seattle.
In 1993, Holl won the open competition for the Museum Of Contemporary Art in Helsinki and this, his largest work to date, was completed in May 1998. Holl’s phenomenological approach has always put a premium on constructional and structural inventiveness. This last is particularly evident in his unusual use of lift slab construction in realising the Seattle church. His prototypical regional megaform proposal for Texas known as Spiroid Sectors (1990) is typical of his theoretical work at the urban-landscape scale.
He has elaborated his philosophical position in a series of books: Anchoring (1989), Questions Of Perception (1994), and intertwining (1996). He has taught at Columbia Uni’s school of Architecture since 1976, where he is currently a tenured professor. In 1997 he received the New York AIA Medal of Honour and in 1998 the Alvar Aalto Medal. He has designed the Kiasma and Triple lamps for Fontana Arte.
Use coupon code DP10 and get 10% discount plus free shipping!