The Isamu Noguchi lamp -inspired by the traditional Japanese paper lanterns- is one of the design icons of the last century.

The Noguchi lamp reminds the traditional lantern in all the parts and materials used -it’s made of paper handmade from the bark of the mulberry tree with a very simple and light wooden structure- except for the traditional hand-painted decoration: the designer preferred a blank surface instead.

The name chose for the lamp was “Akari”: that means variously as ‘light’, ‘sun’ or ‘moon’.

The first one was produced in 1951 and since then the Noguchi lamp has changed its design going from organic to geometric forms. From the 50s to the 80s Noguchi designed more than 100 different variants of it creating hanging, standing and floor lamps.

While experimenting with the artificial light in the 30s and 40s, Noguchi created the Lunar sculptural works that -with their unreal shapes, biomorphic forms and hided lights- were often used as interior decorations as well making subtle the difference between art and design.

The same philosophy -almost 20 years later- was the inspiration for the Noguchi lamp conceived to be practical and sculptural at the same time.

A Noguchi Lamp for Everybody.

Not only Noguchi wanted to create beautiful and artistic objects, but also affordable and mass-producible. That’s why -ten years before the most famous Noguchi lamp- he designed the Three-Legged Cylinder Lamp for Knoll.

The place that inspired Noguchi to create his “Akari” series was Gifu: the Japanese city where traditionally were manufactured all the paper products such as lanterns or umbrellas.

At that time Noguchi was already internationally known and appreciated for his works, and the city’s major asked him to design an affordable and mass producible lamp to help to revive the local paper-craft industry. The artist started to work at the project the same day sketching out a lamp that perfectly mixed sculptural and design qualities from one side with traditional and advanced manufacturing techniques from the other.

Since the 50s the Noguchi lamp has been produced by the Gifu paper-lantern manufacturer  Ozeki & Co and by Vitra Design Museum from 2001

The lamps were an incredible commercial successful, were published in many interiors magazine and exhibited in Tokio as in New York along the 50s.

Despite their incredible success and the famous designer, the first lamps were around $7-50 being perfectly in line with the manifesto of many mid-century designers that aimed to produce beautiful but affordable objects.

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