LUIS PEREZ DE LA OLIVA (Spain, mid-20th century) for GRIN LUZ/FASE.

Table lamp …
Descripción

LUIS PEREZ DE LA OLIVA (Spain, mid-20th century) for GRIN LUZ/FASE. Table lamp "Concorde/Tiburon", 1967. Lacquered metal and solid wood. Measurements: 55 x 31 x 42 cm. Concorde desk lamp with a tilting shade that offers different lighting angles. It rises on a circular base from which emerges the curved shaft in wood on which supports a metal structure. The tilting shade hangs from the latter. Fase lamps are distinguished by their impeccable design, functionality and quality of materials. A true emblem of Spanish manufacturing, Fase has exported its lighting to more than 32 countries in the last 30 years. Spanish lighting manufacturer Fase was founded in Madrid in 1964 by industrial designer Pedro Martín. Martín first sold his self-produced lamps in markets, before successfully establishing a factory in Torrejón de Ardoz, just outside Madrid. In the 1970s, Fase was a major player in the Spanish manufacturing industry, contributing to an economy struggling with oil crises and a difficult transition to democracy. Fase sold lighting for more than three decades to 32 different countries, with its largest markets being the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Germany, United Arab Emirates, Japan, Canada and the United States. Despite Fase's commercial success, information about the company and its history is scarce and sources often contradictory. Early Fase designs are considered modern, with original combinations of metals such as chrome and steel, with marble and wood, in a range of bright colors. Often, the fixtures could also be moved thanks to a sophisticated swivel system devised by early Fase designers, which soon became a trademark along with their glass diffusers. Important Fase designs include Boomerang 64, Boomerang 2000, 520, Faro and President, all of which are believed to have been designed in the 1960s. Beginning in the 1970s, Fase introduced modern Italian and Bauhaus-inspired designs to a Spanish public that, emerging from the Franco period, was unfamiliar with the most iconic styles of the 20th century. In addition to combining traditional materials such as wood with a modernist aesthetic, Fase created many lamps in a thoroughly modernist style. Lamps from this period include the Tharsis and the Babylon, both in chrome but with single and double lamps respectively, as well as the Harpoon and the stainless steel Impala (all from the 1970s). Fase's lighting designers and workers remain largely anonymous, resulting in many lamps being falsely advertised as being produced by the Spanish manufacturer, giving rise to a whole genre of "Fase-type" lighting, which can be seen in lamps produced by Madrid-based lighting manufacturers Lupela, GEI (Gabinete Estudios Industriales) and Ma-Of. Authentic Fase lamps can be identified by the company name or logo, usually found on the lamp base or socket. In the 1980s, Fase began manufacturing halogen lamps. Although these lamps were very popular and novel at the time, the break with tradition was unsuccessful and ultimately contributed to the company's demise.

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LUIS PEREZ DE LA OLIVA (Spain, mid-20th century) for GRIN LU

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LUIS PEREZ DE LA OLIVA (España, mediados del siglo XX) para GRIN LUZ Lámpara de oficina, ca. 1985. Metal cromado. Medidas: 38 X 55 cm. Lámpara de sobremesa de oficina diseñada por Luis Pérez de La Oliva y producida por Grin Luz, en España, durante la década de 1980. Tiene una base circular de metal y un difusor cromado que descansa sobre un pie metálico con un recubrimiento ocre anaranjado. El conjunto presenta curvas aerodinámicas y modernas. El diseño es impecable. La calidad de los materiales se combina con la funcionalidad. Luis Pérez de la Oliva se especializó en el diseño de lámparas de oficina y hogar. Trabajó principalmente para Fase en los años setenta y ochenta. Sus piezas irradian el encanto atemporal del diseño vintage. El fabricante español de iluminación Fase fue fundado en Madrid en 1964 por el diseñador industrial Pedro Martín. Martín vendió sus lámparas de producción propia primero en mercadillos, antes de establecer con éxito una fábrica en Torrejón de Ardoz, a las afueras de Madrid. En los años setenta, Fase fue uno de los principales actores de la industria manufacturera española, contribuyendo a una economía que luchaba contra las crisis del petróleo y una difícil transición a la democracia. Fase vendió iluminación durante más de tres décadas a 32 países diferentes, siendo sus mayores mercados el Reino Unido, Francia, Italia, Alemania, Emiratos Árabes Unidos, Japón, Canadá y Estados Unidos. A pesar del éxito comercial de Fase, la información sobre la empresa y su historia es escasa y las fuentes a menudo contradictorias.