Azure

Universal Language

The craftsmans­hip of Montreal studio Lambert & Fils speaks to an internatio­nal audience

- BY AUSTIN MACDONALD

THE DIN AT Lambert & Fils’s Montreal workshop is deafening. Plinking brass bars, whirring power tools and gasping pneumatic hoses get garbled into a primordial techno. For all this sonic chaos, the rigour of the workmanshi­p has helped this maker of sleek contempora­ry lighting cultivate a reputation for elegant fixtures that walk a line between hand-built and precision-assembled.

The tempo has only increased since founder Samuel Lambert and his team ramped up their European invasion in October 2016 with the unveiling of Laurent – a family of opaline glass globes circumscri­bed by thin metal supports – at Biennale Interieur in Kortrijk, Belgium. “Kortrijk suited us: It’s small, highly curated, and at the frontier of design and art,” Lambert recalls. “It felt like a homecoming, and being welcomed by an extended design family.”

At Salone del Mobile’s Euroluce lighting fair this spring, Lambert did a teaser release of Mile – a monochrome triangular prism reminiscen­t of a fluorescen­t trough light – and promoted a collaborat­ion with up-and-coming Montreal designer Guillaume Sasseville. Though simple, Mile may be the studio’s most advanced design yet, with a direct-drive power source that eliminates the need for an ungainly transforme­r, and micro-adjustable counterwei­ghts that enable multiple fixtures to intersect. This feature is ideal for creating gravitydef­ying compositio­ns of up- and downlighti­ng. “Milan was just a pre-launch,” Lambert says. “We wanted to confront the object in a real-world setting and observe people’s interactio­ns with it.”

As the company reaches out to the internatio­nal market, Lambert is neither rushing to embrace technology for technology’s sake nor shying away from it. “We’re all LED now,” he announces, “mais on s’en fout” – downplayin­g both the importance of technology to the larger goal of making great lighting, and the challenges of working in a highly technical area of design. That’s not to mention the delicate re-engineerin­g required to meet the regulation­s of new markets across Europe, Asia and Australia. “For a light to look effortless, it can be quite complex behind the scenes,” says Lambert. lambertetf­ils.com

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 ??  ?? Samuel Lambert (second from left) with members of his creative team in Montreal.
Samuel Lambert (second from left) with members of his creative team in Montreal.

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