vintage

Flos

Taraxacum Hanging Lamp by Achille & Pier Giacomo Castiglioni

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The Taraxacum (Latin for 'dandelion') was designed by brothers Achille & Pier Giacomo Castiglioni for Flos in 1960; its organic, lobed form a direct nod to the plant's billowing seed head. What makes the piece remarkable is its material ingenuity: the brothers encased a steel frame in a resin "cocoon" sprayed using plastic polymers originally developed for military use, a process that gave the lamp its soft, diffused glow. Now part of MoMA's permanent collection, the Taraxacum stands as one of the purest expressions of Achille's lifelong conviction that the most extraordinary design could emerge from the most ordinary of starting points. 

Whether suspended over a dining table or anchoring a generous living space, its warm, ambient light and sculptural presence make it as liveable as it is collectible. This is a piece of design history that holds its value as confidently as it holds a room.

20"d x 25"H

resin, metal

Italy

Achille & Pier Giacomo Castiglioni were among the most influential figures in 20th-century Italian design, both graduates of the Polytechnic University of Milan, where their thinking was shaped by a deeply cross-disciplinary approach to objects and everyday life. Together they created a series of now-iconic pieces for Flos — including the Arco, Snoopy, and Toio lamps — that became benchmarks of modernist lighting design. Their work earned Italy's highest honour in industrial design, the Compasso d'Oro, cementing a legacy built on the belief that great design should be as inventive as it is functional.

Condition: Vintage