Modern Stripes - Floor Lamp - Milano
by Adélie Ducasse
In stock
Material
Ceramic
Are you a professional? Join our Trade Program now
Sea Ranch on a foggy November morning, Adélie finds herself in a wooden cabin with large windows and a vast ceiling with its inclination typical of modernist architecture.
She is immersed in nature, facing a raging ocean... grey tones, clear light.
She envisions this collection in black and white, a balance of grey and off-white stripes, supported by a solid, elegant black base.
The collection consists of 4 sculptural lightings and a ceramic mirror.
Meticulously handcrafted in Italy, they embody the rigor and craftsmanship that are characteristic of the Bauhaus influence in her work.
The Milano is built around an asymmetric dialogue between two ceramic shafts rising from a shared rectangular black base. The taller column carries an inverted cone; the shorter one curves into an illuminated shade. Two heights, two gestures, one lamp.
W 20 x D 50 x H 137 cm
W 7.87 x D 19.69 x H 53.94 in
Materials: Ceramic
About
Adélie Ducasse
Keeping a child's soul. That is the intention of Adélie Ducasse, a multidisciplinary artist whose colorful, playful universe draws from the spontaneity of childhood and its brightly colored games.
Ducasse grew up across New Caledonia and Réunion, two islands where saturated color and primal geometry are part of the landscape. That early visual environment shaped the palette and formal vocabulary she carries into every piece she makes.
At university, she studied mathematics. The discipline gave her tools for abstraction that intuition alone could not: sequences that repeat and transform, structures that can be modulated without limit. Her paintings read like logical proofs made visible, each element occupying a precise position in a larger system.
From painting, she moved toward three-dimensional form. The design objects she creates today follow the same geometric logic, but now carry function. They are sculptures that sit on a surface and serve a purpose, works that exist at the boundary between art and design.












.jpg&w=3840&q=100)













