Verner Panton

1.600

A pair of Panthella floor lamps

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Product Description

Verner Panton (1926 – 1998)

A pair of Panthella floor lamps

White opal acrylic, steel and plastic

H: 121cm  Dia: 50cm

Louis Poulsen, Denmark, 1970’s

Created in 1971, Verner Panton’s Panthella design is one of his more popular. He aimed to create a lamp in which the base as well as the shade would act as a reflector. The lamps light source is hidden under a milky-white, hemispheric acrylic shade and a white, trumpet-like base. This contributes to a beautiful distribution of light and a well balanced form.

The mushroom-shaped shade is made of acrylic, the stem of white lacquered steel and the foot of plastic.

Several versions were produced during its early days, but Panthella with white shade and base is the only edition in production today.

Verner Panton

Verner Panton (1926 – 1998) is considered one of Denmark's most influential 20th-century furniture and interior designers. During his career, he created innovative and futuristic designs in a variety of materials, especially plastics, and in vibrant and exotic colors. His style was very "1960s" but regained popularity at the end of the 20th century, Panton's most well-known furniture models are still in production (at Vitra, among others).

Panton studied architecture at the Royal Danish Academy of Art in Copenhagen. During the first two years of his career, 1950–1952, he worked at the architectural practice of Arne Jacobsen, another Danish architect and furniture designer. Panton turned out to be an "enfant terrible" and he started his own design and architectural office. He became well known for his innovative architectural proposals. Near the end of the 1950s, his chair designs became much more unconventional, with no legs or discernible back. In 1960 Panton was the designer of the very first single-form injection-moulded plastic chair. The Stacking chair or S chair, became his most famous and mass-produced design resulting organic shapes inspired by the human body requirements, the tongue.

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Verner Panton experimented with designing entire environments: radical and psychedelic interiors that were an ensemble of his curved furniture, wall upholstering, textiles and lighting.

Additionally, Panton is well known for his innovative design work for Der Spiegel, a well-known German publication in Hamburg.