Artemide
In-Ei Tatsuno-Otoshigo Pendant Light
Price € 1.470,00
The In Ei collection includes numerous suspension, table and floor lamps, united by the same futuristic design concept that nevertheless embodies strong references to the past. In EI Tatsuno Otoshigo is a suspension lamp that exploits inimitable folds determined by plastic shapes and structural solidities originating from a technology that Issey Miyake has created and perfected in collaboration with Artemide. The recycled material creates luminous transparencies superior to those of paper without however needing any internal support. The solidity of this design has been able to give life to numerous variations of shape and use.
W.37,6 x D.37,6 x H.280 cm
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Each product is tailor-made for the personal taste and indications of the customer in a customized finish and that is why the production time may vary according to the chosen product.
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Artemide is one of the most prestigious names of the Italian design: the company has in fact left an indelible impact on the lighting sector. Artemide lamps are often courageous and experimental, but also incredibly practical. The philosophy of Artemide follows the principle of the "Human Light", according to which every lighting project must focus on the human being and his needs. Another peculiarity of the brand is the incessant tendency to innovation, so much that over 60 people are employed in its own Research & Development center.Read more
Designed by
Issey Miyake
Issey Miyake (1938-2022) was one of the most important Japanese fashion designers. His style, capable of combining great respect for traditional Japanese styles with a great openness to experimental materials of modern origin, led him to achieve great commercial success starting from the second half of the 80s until he became one of the most recognizable brands in the world of international fashion. Born in Hiroshima, he was in the city when the US dropped the atomic bomb there at the end of World War II, so much so that he was left with a slight limp for life from the aftermath of radiation. Despite this, his works exude optimism and confidence for the future, right from his Parisian debut as an apprentice in the studios of Guy Laroche and Hubert de Givenchy. Miyake begins presenting his collections starting from 1971, dividing himself between Tokyo and New York, becoming very well known in the following years for the updates he managed to make to the pleating technique, which he created according to new methodologies that allowed greater possibilities of movement and more resistance to washing. Folds and three-dimensionality are the trademark of his clothes until the early 90s, when in the new Pleats Please line he combines clothes that are characterized above all by the drawings on the surface, created by artists such as Yasumasa Morimura and Nobuyoshi Araki. In the 90s he left the creative direction of his company (in 1994 for the men's line and in 1999 for the men's line) to concentrate on research and experimentation on fabrics, the most notable result of which will be the A-POC line (acronym for A Piece of Cloth), in which numerous apparently identical clothes are made from a single very long fabric which will then be taken out of the frame directly in the shop and adapted to the buyer's needs. Issey Miyake's most famous foray into the world of design, which also earned him a Compasso d'Oro in 2014, is the In-Ei lamp collection created for Artemide. He also worked with Iittala.
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