Igor

Designed by Duccio Maria Gambi

Igor presents itself as a flying luminous entity suspended in space, a simple but sophisticated geometry that finds its synthetic beauty in its proportions. A lamp that can live alone or as a cluster with compositions where the rule is not sought but appears as consecutive moments in motion within its volume; with a strong personality in terms of size and abstraction that encloses each of its components in a simple and closed volume. A minimalism of character that, depending on the finishes, flows on the axis that connects orthodox minimalism, freshness, and naked and elegant matter.

Duccio Maria Gambi describes Igor as an exploration “to combine the fascination for synthetic structures and clear, decisive forms, evoking at the same time a sense of movement that naturally contrasts with the static nature of formal research.” The designer found inspiration in “a crane on the horizon with the sea of Puglia in the background,” and in the world of helicopters — where the same balance of resistance and lightness defines the aesthetic result.

Igor presents itself as a flying luminous entity suspended in space, a simple but sophisticated geometry that finds its synthetic beauty in its proportions. A lamp that can live alone or as a cluster with compositions where the rule is not sought but appears as consecutive moments in motion within its volume; with a strong personality in terms of size and abstraction that encloses each of its components in a simple and closed volume. A minimalism of character that, depending on the finishes, flows on the axis that connects orthodox minimalism, freshness, and naked and elegant matter.

Duccio Maria Gambi describes Igor as an exploration “to combine the fascination for synthetic structures and clear, decisive forms, evoking at the same time a sense of movement that naturally contrasts with the static nature of formal research.” The designer found inspiration in “a crane on the horizon with the sea of Puglia in the background,” and in the world of helicopters — where the same balance of resistance and lightness defines the aesthetic result.