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Italy Makes Light Right

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Italy is to contemporary lighting design as Detroit is to cars. While no country can claim total dominance of the field, Italy has long been at the forefront of lighting innovation. After World War II the country transformed itself from a sleepy, mostly agrarian culture into a powerhouse of design manufacturing, thanks to a core group of men and women who almost single-handedly shaped the direction of contemporary consumer products. “The emergence of Italy during the last decade as the dominant force in consumer product design has influenced the work of every other European country and now is having its effect in the United States,” wrote curator Emilio Ambasz in his introduction to the catalogue to Italy: The New Domestic Landscape, a groundbreaking show at New York’s Museum of Modern Art in 1972. This was especially true for lighting, with companies like FLOS and Artemide leading the way. With the establishment of Euroluce, a major lighting trade fair in 1976, Italy became the global lighting marketplace.

Since then the major players have kept pushing the envelope, from incandescent to halogen to LED, whose potential seems boundless; and OLED fixtures loom on the horizon. The secret to Italy’s prominence is the passion of its individual manufacturers as champions of technological exploration and innovation. “Design has little meaning if there is no substance,” Ernesto Gismondi, founder and CEO of Artemide, has said. “It is only in-house technology which sets you apart from the rest.”

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Foscarini

THE NEWEST OF ITALY’S major lighting companies, Foscarini began life in Murano in 1981. Founder Riccardo Olivieri started the custom glass manufacturer to create lighting for commercial projects. In 1988 Olivieri, who had moved to Miami, sold Foscarini to designers Carlo Urbinati and Alessandro Vecchiato, previous employees of the company. While Foscarini had begun dabbling in producing work by outside talent, the new owners aggressively expanded into the world of serious design.

COURTESY FOSCARINI

COURTESY FOSCARINI

Rodolfo Dordoni, still a major figure in the world of Italian design, created its first best-selling product, Lumiere, in 1990, and the company was truly launched. The owners continued to push Foscarini forward with such lamps as Ferruccio Laviani’s totem-like Orbital, introduced in 1992, and the polyethylene Havana by Joseph Forakis, in 1993. Foscarini reaches out to an eclectic array of designers ranging from Marc Sadler, who created its famous Twiggy lamp, to Oki Sato, of the Japanese design studio Nendo.

In 2009 Foscarini signed a licensing agreement with Diesel to create lighting for the fashion brand’s home collection, extending its reach to a younger audience with a hipper, more casual style.

COURTESY FOSCARINI

COURTESY FOSCARINI

According to Urbinati, Foscarini’s annual sales are now approximately $49 million, a quarter less than FLOS and one third of Artemide’s $135 million. Its products are sold in eighty countries around the world. Like all other major lighting companies, Foscarini invests heavily in technology; development of a single idea can take years. And, as with the other major lighting companies, light is a passion.

”Lighting speaks to your soul,” says co-owner Urbinati. “We want to keep on creating things not seen before, but not strange. Things that touch your heart.”

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