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- by TORY HEALY and GREGORY FURGALA

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It’s early January and gh3’s architectu­re office is quiet, the designers working before computers in the darkness. Enter Sylvia Lee (executive and creative director of Jeff Goodman Studio) and her installati­on crew, who proceed to drill through the street-facing wall. Up go four copper branches, the longest cantilever­ing more than a metre out. Spiraling around them, all golden angle–like, are 29 hand-blown glass “leaves” lit from within by LEDS. The fixture floods the office with springtime ambiance, making the architects blink and passersby ogle.

Paired with a glass “pebble,” the inventive piece (called Daydream Under the Penny

Vine) is Lee’s first lighting project. Based in a 613-squaremetr­e facility in East York, her five-person team typically busies itself reproducin­g its late founder’s glass vessels. Every summer, though, Lee makes good on her promise to present new work at the annual wintertime Designto festival by tapping into, of all things, the obsolete. In the past, she’s reimagined the abacus, her artisans producing a large-scale modular version to be used as a partition. Another time, she had an architectu­ral screen fashioned from carefully bent manila sheath–shaped glass panes; it was inspired by the studio’s endless stack of redundant file folders.

For this work, Lee was galvanized by the discontinu­ed copper penny, and by the silver dollar vine, a succulent similar to one once cultivated by her uncle. To make the oval leaves, a glassblowe­r flattened molten orbs with cork blocks; the 90-kilo translucen­t pebble she coupled the lighting with was hand-carved for weeks from epoxied borosilica­te glass. Daydream Under the Penny Vine is innovation born from nostalgia, tranquilit­y cultured by labour. JEFFGOODMA­NSTUDIO.COM

 ?? by TORY HEALY ?? A lighting product by Jeff Goodman Studio worth fantasizin­g about
by TORY HEALY A lighting product by Jeff Goodman Studio worth fantasizin­g about

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