Nemo
Projecteur Floor Lamp
Price € 1.049,00
The Projecteur 365 floor lamp by Nemo was originally designed by Le Corbusier for the High Court of Chandigarh, a project that has gone down in the history of architecture, for some a true opus magnum by the great Swiss master who was able on that occasion to design an entire city. Also available in a suspension or wall / ceiling version, Projecteur in its floor configuration takes the form of a large spotlight resting on a circular base, supporting a convex diffuser that is internally sandblasted. The closure hooks are very evident, emphasized to pass from a pure functional element to a sober decorative complement.
Ø 28 x H.43 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
Le Corbusier
Le Corbusier (1887-1965) is one of the most illustrious names in world architecture of the twentieth century. Swiss by birth, but French by adoption, he is considered the great master of the Modern Movement, a current that revolutionized architecture in the period between the two World Wars. Refined theorist, he effectively conceptualized the pillars of a new architecture, destined to change the world, and of a revolutionary urban conception. He was a pioneer in the use of concrete and designed buildings that have now risen to symbolize the twentieth century, such as Ville Savoye, the Chapel of Notre-Dame du Haut or the Unité d'Habitation complex in Marseille. He was also a designer, author also in this field of products that have made history, often in collaboration with his cousin Pierre Jeanneret and his assistant Charlotte Perriand. His furniture was re-edited in series starting in 1965 by the Italian Cassina company, in an operation of great philological rigor and extraordinary success, while his lamps are now produced by Nemo.Read more