Designers including Philippe Starck, Patricia Urquiola and Nendo have reinterpreted the Bourgie table lamp produced by Italian plastic brand Kartell to mark the design’s tenth anniversary.
Kartell invited fourteen designers to put their own spin on the plastic Bourgie lamp, originally designed by Italian designer Ferruccio Laviani in 1994.
He first created the lamp as a transparent polycarbonate copy of the one that sat on his desk, which had a traditional antique candelabra stand and fabric shade.
Ten years on, the group of designers have altered the shape, materials and function of the piece while keeping the essence of Laviani’s original.
“I have always supported and promoted the ‘remix’ concept, to explain that what I create is something that already exists but becomes something else through my revision of reality, my re-interpretation of things,” said Laviani.
Nendo turned the Bourgie lamp upside-down and used the inverse of its shape to create the silhouette for a cylindrical design.
A wireframe version with a CMYK LED lightsource was designed by Ludovica+Roberto Palomba.
Mario Bellini used two shades and three stems to turn it into a coat stand, while Patricia Urquiola took an element from the stand to form branches of a chandelier.
Philippe Starck wrapped the stand in bracelets and charms, Piero Lissoni created the lamp in paper and Christophe Pillet covered it in grey felt.
Other designers that participated included Tokujin Yoshioka, Rodolfo Dordoni, Eugeni Quitllet, Alberto Meda, Patrick Jouin and Front.
The designs were showcased at Kartell’s flagship showroom in Paris to coincide with the Maison & Objet trade fair last month.
They will also be exhibited during the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan and ICFF in New York later this year.
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Kartell’s Bourgie lamp appeared first on Dezeen.
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