Nemo
AS1C Table Lamp
Price € 1.275,00
Nemo's AS1C lamp is a creation of one of the greatest names in Italian design of the 1900s, Franco Albini, who co-signed it together with Franca Helg, her collaborator Antonio Piva and his son Marco Albini. The balance of its shapes, a sign of timeless elegance, sees a hemispherical diffuser supported by a curved metal stem (available in chromed or black chromed metal), supported by a thin metal base. The intensity of the light can be adjusted through a dimmer installed on the power cable. Like many of the lamps created by Albini and his studio, its original design dates back to the 1960s and was initially produced by the Sirrah company.
W.50 x D.40 x H.64 cm
Salvioni Design Solutions delivers all around the world. The assembly service is also available by our teams of specialized workers.
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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Thanks to a cunning politic of re-edition of classics of the past and the collaboration with some of the most prestigious designers of the international panorama, Nemo’s light qualifies as a true author’s light. Founded in the 90s by Franco Cassina and Carlo Forcolini to go alongside Cassina’s production with high qualitative level lamps, thanks to its prestigious birthplace the company has been able to benefit from production rights of the illumination projects by some of the greatest masters of the twentieth century, listing in its catalogue names such as Le Corbusier and Franco Albini.Read more
Designed by
Franco Albini
Franco Albini (1905-1977) was one of the great masters of Italian Rationalism, both in the field of design and architecture. Since the 1930s he distinguished himself as one of the leading elements of the group of young architects who, gathered around the Casabella magazine, advocated the peculiar Italian interpretation of the Modern Movement and the Bauhaus that were forever changing European and world architecture, and which took the name of Rationalism in Italy. Putting functional values at the center, his creations did not try to hide the constructive elements, but rather emphasized them and put them in the foreground. After the war he began to collaborate with Franca Helg and intensified his theoretical and teaching activity, centered on the search for a synthesis between artisan tradition and industrial practice. As a designer he has worked with various realities such as Cassina, Arflex, Poggi and Bonacina; his creations are also re-edited by brands such as Knoll and Nemo. Among the major legacies of his work as an architect are the planning of Line 1 of the Milan Metro, in collaboration with Bob Noorda for the graphics, and the Rinascente building in Rome. Most of his post-war projects were co-signed with Franca Helg (1920-1989), who will carry on the activity of Studio Albini even after the death of its founder.Read more