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Showing posts with label lamps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lamps. Show all posts

Thursday, October 13, 2016

Walter and Greta von Nessen

Walter von Nessen (1889-1943) was a German-born industrial designer. Prior to World War I, he was a student of Bruno Paul at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Berlin and a teacher at the Charlottenburg Art School. After the war, he was employed by architect Peter Behrens. From 1919 to 1923, he designed furniture in Stockholm.

Greta von Nessen (1900-1975) was the daughter of an architect. Born in Sweden in 1900, she graduated from the School for Industrial Arts in Stockholm and married Walter von Nessen.

In 1923 the couple immigrated to the United States and in 1926 founded Nessen Studios in New York, where they almost exclusively designed and fabricated architectural lighting.

The couple attracted the attention of top architects with their sleek lamp designs and soon rose to prominence in the New York design world, becoming part of the vanguard of modern industrial designers, along with such notables as Raymond Loewy, Donald Deskey, Eliot Noyes, Russel Wright and Gilbert Rohde.

Walter von Nessen's career culminated with the introduction of a series of swing arm lamps, while Greta von Nessen's most famous design is the Anywhere Lamp, which was introduced in 1951. It has been featured on a U.S. postage stamp and exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art.

After her husband's death in 1943, Greta von Nessen continued to design lamps out of their studio, now known as  Nessen Lighting.

From cooperhewitt.org and nessenlighting.com


Table lamp - Walter von Nessen
artic.org

Floor lamp - Walter von Nessen
modernismgallery.com

Tripod lamps - Walter von Nessen
modernism.com

Swing arm lamp - Walter von Nessen
1stdibs.com

Anywhere Lamp - Greta von Nessen
1stdibs.com

Double cone lamp - Greta von Nessen
1stdibs.com


You might have noticed our Greta von Nessen double cone lamp in a recent post.


Greta von Nessen lamp in our entryway

Saturday, October 1, 2016

Spaces: Entryway

Once you get past our still-unpainted front doors (long story, soon to be rectified), you'll be greeted by more of our favorite things. The sideboard has sentimental value for my daughter. She found it at an estate sale years ago, and it was the first piece she ever restored. The vintage Von Nessen lamp came out of our store before it closed, and the brass figurals are part of my daughter's collection, while the Howard Miller Museum Clock is mine. The woven wall hanging and stainless steel coat rack are my daughter's, and the mirror is mine...new modern pieces that I think work well with the vintage. The picture on the wall is embroidered folk art, an Etsy find that I gave my daughter one Christmas.




Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Serge Mouille

Serge Mouille (1922-1988) was born in Paris to a policeman and a seamstress. They were disappointed when he decided, at age 13, to enter the School of Applied Arts silver workshop. He was such a gifted student of metallurgy and silversmithing that began teaching at age 25. After receiving his degree, he apprenticed under Gabriel Lacroix and then started his own workshop.

In 1953 Mouille introduced a lighting design, the iconic Three-Arm Floor Lamp. The design was the result of his expertise with metals, as well as his knowledge of musculature and skeletons, making the lamp both minimal and organic in form.

In 1956, gallery owner Steph Simon began showing Mouille's work alongside pieces by Charlotte Perriand, Isamu Noguchi, and Jean Prouvé. Having learned of Mouille's work, Hollywood star Henry Fonda literally turned up on the designer's doorstep and refused to leave unless he could have a lamp. Even though the designer did not know who Mr. Fonda was, he relented, and the actor then owned the first Mouille lamp to hit U.S. shores.

In 1962, Mouille introduced his Colonnes Collection, columns of fluorescent light which were not well received. In fact, a potential partnership with Knoll fell through as a result of Florence Knoll's opposition to the design, and Mouille stopped designing lights, returning the the School of Applied Arts to teach silversmithing and to design jewelry.

From dwr.com
All images from sergemouilleusa.com



Three-Arm Floor Lamp

Three-Arm Ceiling Lamp

Curved-Arm Rotating Sconce

Saturn Sconce

Snail Ceiling Lamp

Signal Floor Lamp

Totem Floor Lamp

Saturday, December 21, 2013

In the store: Floor lamps

New to the store are two floor lamps...one small Lightolier by Gerald Thurston and a large Italian made of brass and marble. The small lamp stands about 48 inches tall (122 cm), and the Italian lamp is 86 inches (122 cm). Despite their difference in size, both are equally dramatic.


Gerald Thurston floor lamp for Lightoler

Front view

Italian floor lamp in brass with marble base

Close-up of globe

Friday, November 29, 2013

In the store: Stiffel Rocket lamps

These brass Rocket lamps are the best of both worlds...elegant and glamorous, yet very space age. Everything is original on these lamps, including the shades and diffusers. These are Stiffel quality with design pizzazz. What more could you want in a lamp?


Rocket lamps for Stiffel

Top view

Lamps in situ

Close up of rocket-style base

You will frequently see these lamps attributed to Tommi Parzinger, but I have seen no evidence that Parzinger ever designed for Stiffel. If you have any catalogs that prove otherwise, I'd love to see them.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Delightfull lamps

Since I showed you a beautiful vintage lamp yesterday, I'll share some new modern lighting that I think you'll like too. We've added the Delightfull line to our inventory, and we'd like to introduce you to a few of their products that we love best. The Portuguese company offers many choices of metals, colors, stone bases and textile cords...even combinations of several colors. If you can imagine your dream lamp, chances are you can build it in this line.


Ike suspension light

Norah suspension light

Evans floor lamp

Scofield floor lamp

Meola table lamp

Diana table lamp

Miles wall lamp

Simone wall lamp

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Mid century lamps...the gift that keeps on giving

My SIL walked in a few nights ago bearing gifts for my daughter and me. He had been to an estate sale and had found lamps he thought we'd love...and we did.

He said, "When I saw these, I realized how seldom I buy gifts for the two of you, just because." I've been saying for five years that he's a keeper, and it looks like I was right! Every time we look at our lamps, we'll remember his sweet gesture.

My daughter has a thing for small metal lamps with skinny drum shades that straddle the Art Deco and MCM eras, so you can imagine how delighted she was with these little gems. They're about 15" high with textured cream-colored shades and a Lucite ball on the metal base.


Small modern lamps with drum shades and lucite/metal bases


He chose mine based on my love of the angular base on one of the lamps designed by Otto and Ridi Kolb, as well as the curved necks on many of Gino Sarfatti's lamps. Mine isn't a copy of any of their designs, but it definitely has a similar vibe. While my daughter's lamps are in great condition, the shade on mine needs to be rubbed lightly with steel wool and then primed and painted. I'm going to leave the legs black and paint the shade a pale glossy cream.


Mid-century desk lamp, reminiscent of Kolb lamps

Otto and Ridi Kolb lamp
liveauctioneers.com

I'm headed to Lowe's to pick up a few supplies so I can give my wonderful new lamp a makeover soon, and I'll be sure to share it with you when it's done.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Shiny objects: C. Jere' lamp and sculpture

A recent addition to our inventory is this impressive C. Jere' lamp that stands 3 1/2 feet tall in all its chrome glory. (That's over one meter tall to you metric folks.) Can you imagine what a statement a piece this big and this shiny would make?

C. Jere' lamp

C. Jere' lamp, signed


Here are some great new photos of the Flight of Birds sculpture that we have in the store. It's almost 6 feet of Jere' goodness.


C. Jere' Flight of Birds

Flight of Birds, alternate view

C. Jere' Flight of Birds, signed

Friday, November 18, 2011

In the store: Baker, Baughman and more

This past week saw a lot of inventory leave the store and a lot more come in. Some auction items arrived, and we made a trip out of state to pick up several more things, so we have a nice assortment of new pieces just in time for the weekend.

My SIL can't stop talking about the gigantic arc lamp that is almost 8 feet tall. He's totally nuts about the thing. Not only does the center bulb light up, but there are smaller bulbs inside the globe which illuminate it. I have to admit, without question, that it's one of the most dramatic pieces we've ever had!

Arc lamp

We have several new chairs: an off-white Milo Baughman swivel chair and a pair that the auction company described as "Jens Risom style," so that's what we're calling them till we can figure out who made them. Marked or not, they are obviously something special. We also picked up a super pair of Danish armchairs with beautiful green cushions, which I have to put new foam in today. I'll add photos as soon as I finish.

Milo Baughman chair
Jens Risom style chairs

We sold the massive Tobia Scarpa dining table yesterday, but we picked up its little brother...a Scarpa coffee table...the night before, so we won't mind saying goodbye quite as much.

Chrome coffee table by Tobia Scarpa

And speaking of coffee tables, if wood is more to your liking, we also just put a beautiful Danish coffee table on the floor.

Danish coffee table

That's not all. There are more beautiful wood pieces: a long Danish style credenza and a superb buffet/credenza by Baker that is finished on both sides. What quality!

Danish style credenza
Buffet/credenza by Baker

Again, my SIL has outdone himself. He just keeps on finding beautiful furniture, and I'm sure there's something for every taste.