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MOTOKO ISHII (Japan, 1938), for Staff Wall sconce, ca. 1970s. Polished metal and glass. Measurements: 20 x 25 cm. Wall lamp designed by Motoko Ishii for Staff, in the 1970s. Ishii was inspired on this occasion by the space age. The glass balls that protect the lamp make it optically larger. The transparent volume of the globe lamp lends lightness to the design. Motoko Ishii is a Japanese lighting designer. From 1965 to 1967 she worked in lighting design studios in Finland and Germany. Returning to Japan in 1968, she established the Ishii Motoko Design Office. One of her main projects was the lighting design for Expo ‘75 in Okinawa. From the 1980s onwards, she did the designs for a number of major projects. Three major events for which he was responsible for lighting were Expo ‘85 in Tsukuba, the Yokohama Lighting Festival and Japan Flora 2000. He also designed lighting for the cities of Osaka, Hakodate, Himeji and Kurashiki, and for the gassh?-zukuri village of Shirakawa. His 1989 redesign of the Tokyo Tower lighting attracted international attention. He won the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America award for the Light Fantasy Electricity Pavilion at the International Garden and Vegetation Exposition (Osaka, 1990) and again for the Rainbow Bridge (1994). In 2009, he designed the lighting for the Elisabeth Bridge in Budapest, Hungary.

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MOTOKO ISHII (Japan, 1938), for Staff Wall sconce, ca. 1970s. Polished metal and glass. Measurements: 20 x 25 cm. Wall lamp designed by Motoko Ishii for Staff, in the 1970s. Ishii was inspired on this occasion by the space age. The glass balls that protect the lamp make it optically larger. The transparent volume of the globe lamp lends lightness to the design. Motoko Ishii is a Japanese lighting designer. From 1965 to 1967 she worked in lighting design studios in Finland and Germany. Returning to Japan in 1968, she established the Ishii Motoko Design Office. One of her main projects was the lighting design for Expo ‘75 in Okinawa. From the 1980s onwards, she did the designs for a number of major projects. Three major events for which he was responsible for lighting were Expo ‘85 in Tsukuba, the Yokohama Lighting Festival and Japan Flora 2000. He also designed lighting for the cities of Osaka, Hakodate, Himeji and Kurashiki, and for the gassh?-zukuri village of Shirakawa. His 1989 redesign of the Tokyo Tower lighting attracted international attention. He won the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America award for the Light Fantasy Electricity Pavilion at the International Garden and Vegetation Exposition (Osaka, 1990) and again for the Rainbow Bridge (1994). In 2009, he designed the lighting for the Elisabeth Bridge in Budapest, Hungary.

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ROSS LOVEGROVE (Wales, 1958) for ARTEMIDE. Table lamp "Aqua Cil tavolo", 2007. Die-cast aluminum base and structure. Steel shaft. Diffuser in hydroformed and mirror-treated aluminum. Measurements: 40 x 30 x 30 cm. The "Aqua Cil" series is distinguished by its wavy lampshade simulating the swaying of water, which contrasts with the sobriety of the die-cast aluminum shaft. It reflects the light to the outside in a wide but soft way. This series was presented at Euroluce 2007 in Milan. The designer Ross Lovegrove studied industrial design at Manchester Polytechnic, and later took a master's degree in design at the Royal College of Art in London, completing his training in 1983. From then on he worked for Frog Design in Germany, on products such as Walkmans for Sony, computers for Apple, etc. He then moved to Paris to work for Knoll International, where he was the author of the successful Alessandri office system. Later he was invited to participate in the Atelier de Nimes with Jean Nouvel and Philippe Stark, advising, among others, Cacharel, Louis Vuitton, Hermès and Dupont. He returned to London in 1986, and completed projects for Airbus Industries, Kartell, Ceccotti, Cappellini, Idee, Moroso, Luceplan, Dirade, Peugeot, Apple, Issey Miyake, Vitra, Alias, Tag Heuer and others, as well as for Japan Airlines and Tokyo Ito Architects in Japan. Throughout his career, Ross Lovegrove has won major international awards, and his work has been widely published, and exhibited in such prominent venues as MoMA and the Guggenheim in New York, the Axis Center in Japan, the Pompidou in Paris or the Design Museum in London, where since 1993 he has had his first permanent collection.