Bitossi Gold Ceramic Table Lamp by Aldo Londi
BitossiAldo Londi ceramic Mid-Century Modern Bitossi table lamp cylinder gold metallic with new dark blue silk shade. Tall, 95 cm ā 37.40 inches, cylinder body in perfect condition with stepped neck in gold metallic glaze. Style full decorated with bands of embossed patterns.
The lamp will be shipped insured overseas in a custom made wooden crate. Cost of transport to the US, Euro 350, is crate included.
Wear consistent with age and use.
We ship worldwide. Request a shipping quote by e-mail to tacojoustra@vintageobjects.com mentioning the piece you are interested in.
Pick-up by appointment only.
We are a 1stDibs Platinum 5 Star Dealer.
Italy is a world trendsetter, and has produced some of the greatest furniture designers in the world, such as Achille Castiglioni, GiĆ² Ponti, and Ettore Sottsass. Italian interior design in the 1900s was particularly well-known and grew to the heights of class and sophistication. At first, in the early 1900s, Italian furniture designers struggled to create an equal balance between classical elegance and modern creativity, and at first, Italian interior design in the 1910s and 1920s was very similar to that of French art deco styles, using exotic materials and creating sumptuous furniture. However, Italian art deco reached its pinnacle under GiĆ² Ponti, who made his designs sophisticated, elegant, stylish and refined, but also modern, exotic and creative. In 1926, a new style of furnishing emerged in Italy, known as "Razionalismo", orĀ "Rationalism". The most successful and famous of the Rationalists were the Gruppo 7, led byĀ Luigi Figini,Ā Gino PolliniĀ andĀ Giuseppe Terragni. There styles used tubular steel and was known as being more plain and simple, and almost Fascist in style after c. 1934. AfterĀ World War II, however, was the period in which Italy had a trueĀ avant-gardeĀ in interior design. With theĀ fall of Fascism, birth of Republic and the 1946 RIMA exhibition, Italian talents in interior decorating were made evident, and with theĀ Italian economic miracle, Italy saw a growth in industrial production and also mass-made furniture. Yet, the 1960s and 1970s saw Italian interior design reach its pinnacle of stylishness, and by that point, with Pop and post-modern interiors, the phrasesĀ "Bel Design"Ā andĀ "Linea Italiana"Ā entered the vocabulary of furniture design.Ā Ever since the late 1970s and early 1980s, some equipment began to be logoed by notable ItalianĀ fashion houses, such asĀ Prada,Ā Versace,Ā Armani,Ā GucciĀ andĀ Moschino.Ā Examples of classic pieces of Italian furniture includeĀ Zanussi's rigorous, creative and streamlinedĀ washing machinesĀ andĀ fridges,[1]Ā the "New Tone" sofas by Atrium,Ā and most famously the innovative post-modern bookcase, made by Ettore Sottsass for theĀ Memphis GroupĀ in 1981, inspired byĀ Bob Dylan's song "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again". The bookcase became a huge cultural icon and design event of the 1980s.[1]Ā Modern Italian design has changed the meaning of style and elegance and many interior designers use Italian or Italian inspired pieces in their work.