Oluce
Lyndon Pendant Light
Price starting from € 5.002,00*
*Price valid for the version with frame in chrome metal and globes in transparent glass - bulb excluded (cod. 450).
The Lyndon suspension lamp by Oluce immediately brings to mind great suggestions from the Belle Époque: long tree-lined avenues lit by gas, dancing evenings illuminated by precious chandeliers, the lively crowd that fills the cafes full of hopes for the future. Lyndon, with forms that are basically a dreamy quote from a perhaps imaginary past, is actually more recent: it was designed by Vico Magistretti in 1977. It is made up of four transparent glass spheres that each house a small bulb, supported by by a sinuous metal structure available in both chrome and satin gold finish.
Ø 90 x H.135 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.
To discover the full range of services available, visit our delivery page.
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Oluce's lamps are very modern and timeless objects with iconic and never old shapes. The company is one of the oldest in the design lighting field in Italy and over the past seventy years of its history has made a fundamental contribution to the development of light furniture. Floor lamps, table lamps, hanging lamps and wall lamps: the Oluce production covers all the segments of the field and leaves ample room to the designer's creativity, assisted by the experience of a top quality manufacture.Read more
Designed by
Vico Magistretti
Vico Magistretti (1920-2006), son of the architect Pier Giulio Magistretti and a pupil of Gio Ponti, is one of the great protagonists of the adventurous period of post-World War II Italian design. He began his career as an architect in his father's studio, contributing to some of the key projects for the reconstruction of Milan after the war such as the QT8 district or the Torre al Parco in via Revere and actively participating in the cultural debate of the time. The growing interest in the architecture of the house led him to become more and more interested in design, a field in which, starting from the 1960s, he will give his best. His projects, effective and functional, always revolve around a strong idea developed with grace and consistency. He forged a lasting collaboration with Cassina, contributed to the creation of lamps that entered the collective imagination with brands such as Artemide and Oluce, designed for Flou the most famous bed in the history of Italian design (the Nathalie model, still a great success today), and obtained great successes with brands such as Kartell, Gavina, Campeggi and Fritz Hansen. In the last years of his career he also forged a close partnership with Maddalena De Padova, for whose brand he created some of his best projects.Read more