Samuel Accoceberry Collection - Scale
by Samuel Accoceberry
In stock
Material
Alabaster
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The Scale is a pendant lamp in alabaster. Its form is planar: flat surfaces arranged so that the visual weight reads as balanced without being symmetrical. The name refers to proportion and equilibrium rather than size, which the Big Scale version addresses separately.
Alabaster is carved and hand-finished for each piece. The stone's warm cream tonality and natural veining vary between individual examples, meaning no two lamps are identical. Each carries its own internal pattern that determines how light distributes across the surface.
Samuel Accoceberry's practice treats material knowledge as a design constraint. Working between Paris and Biarritz, his studio has applied the same attention to proportion and finish across industrial, urban, and limited-edition work. The Scale reflects that consistency: a lamp whose geometry holds across domestic and contract settings alike, from a small dining room to a hotel lobby.
The Scale is available through Monde Singulier's curated selection of Samuel Accoceberry's work.
ø 24 x H 36 cm
ø 9.45 x H 14.17 in
Materials: Alabaster, LED source
About
Samuel Accoceberry
Samuel Accoceberry, designer and artistic director who lives and works between Paris and Biarritz, launched his studio in 2010. Very quickly recognized, he was honored in 2013 by the Grand Prix de la Création de la Ville de Paris and also received various international awards, including 3 Red Dot Design Awards and a German Design Award.
Very sensitive to the valorization of heritage know-how, to the beautiful craftsmanship, as well as to the place of the human in the project, he likes to accompany companies to continue the narration of their brand through design. His decompartmentalized vision of the discipline leads him to design both lighting and street furniture, to consider the industrial approach with as much care as the limited edition.
His contemporary and elegant creations have been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art and the Museum of Decorative Arts in Paris, the Museum of Céramique de Vallauris, at the Triennale Design Museum in Milan and at the Design Museum in Holon.



























