Mid-century modern scandinavian Pendant model Lantern 101 XL steel new edition

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Mid-century modern scandinavian Pendant model Lantern 101 XL steel new edition *Required step

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 The Lantern – the modern and yet classic LE KLINT lamp has grown to an XL version!

 

CEO Kim Weckstrøm Jensen redesigned this lamp into an XL version with a brush steel fitting in 2007 as a salute to one af his design idols, Kaare Klint who designed the Lantern.

 

The sheer size of this lamp makes it ideal for those really high ceilings or as a center piece over a large dining table or as a feature piece beside a corner. 

Year 1944
Dimensions H70 x Ø55 cm
Style Classique
Neuf
Origin Denmark
Fournisseur Le Klint

Kaare Klint

Kaare Klint (1888-1954), the man behind classics such as the Safari Chair and Faaborg Chair, is considered the father of Danish furniture design. For Kaare Klint, the son of architect Peder Vilhelm Jensen-Klint, exposure to architecture was a natural part of his early development. However, it was primarily as a furniture designer that Kaare Klint made his mark on Danish architecture.

Kaare Klint was born in 1888 in Frederiksberg and designed his first furniture in 1914, for the Faaborg Museum. From the beginning, Klint's furniture was characterized by harmony between his choice of form and materials, often inspired by earlier styles or other cultures.

Klint helped found the Royal Academy of Fine Arts Furniture School in 1923, and was appointed professor there in 1924. In this role, he inspired and taught a number of prominent Danish furniture designers, who went on to pave the way for the golden age of Danish design, from 1945 to 1975.

Kaare Klint also founded the Furniture and Spatial Design Department at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts, where he employed a teaching method considered radical in his day. He asked students to construct furniture items from the inside out, based on thorough pre-analysis. The outward style was less significant; instead, the focus was on function analysis, choice of materials, and material processing.

Klint's influence led to a comprehensive renewal of Danish furniture design. He demanded clear and logical structures, with nothing superficial - only honest, pure lines, the best materials, and genuine craftsmanship.