Designed by André Ricard in 1970, the Fontana pendant lamp takes its name from the artist Lucio Fontana, who challenged art history by cutting up his clean oil paintings. His art was an art for the space age that sought to transform the works into experiments with a new three-dimensionality.
The first version of the pendant light maintains its futuristic look, thanks to the good dimension of its more than half sphere and the unmistakable slit from which the light magically emerges, providing soft indirect lighting. Inside it, there is now an efficient light panel that allows the best vertical light flow and directs the light gently and without glare.
The pendant luminaire makes itself best above the dining table, - by the way also gladly with several of her kind - or also as atmospheric light in the parlour or the bedroom.