Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Creative, clever, cozy

Turn on some charm with these designer lighting options

- B y Kim Cook

Designers and lighting companies have been busy coming up with new ways to hold a lightbulb and project light, and winter is a great time to explore their latest solutions. Some are inspired by the skies overhead. Others by style eras, from Deco to disco. Still others are working with interestin­g materials to build a lamp. “There’s a growing world of lighting that’s so much more than the glass globe on a stem,” says designer Ted Bradley of Boulder, Colorado. He cites fresh, sculptural forms: “When done right, they both capture our attention as standalone sculptures and fill the space around them with beautiful, high-quality light.”

Biophilia

Bradley sees a trend toward nature-inspired objects and spaces. “It’s something deeply rooted in all of us,” he says.

Two that he’s been drawn to recently: John Pomp’s Tidal Chandelier, and Ochre’s Moonlight Murmuratio­n. “They’re fascinatin­g, both in their form and the techniques required to make them.”

Pomp is a Philadelph­ia furniture and lighting designer who’s also a glassblowe­r and surfer. His collection­s of glass pendants, chandelier­s, sconces and lamps look like blown bubbles, chunks of ice, swelling waves. The Tidal fixture perches sculpted amoeba-like glass pieces on handforged brass stems to create an organic canopy.

In Murmuratio­n, the British design firm Ochre conceptual­izes the phenomenon of birds swooping through the sky in mesmerizin­g, cloudlike formations. Dozens of LED-lit solid glass drops are suspended from a white canopy to look as though they had been caught in mid-flight at night.

Bradley’s own Samsara fixture

suspends white porcelain rings from a brass spine, evoking the rib cage of a sun-bleached whale skeleton. Other configurat­ions he’s devised suggest the bowing branches of a snow-covered aspen tree, a raptor’s nest, a constellat­ion.

“I aim to capture a moment of beauty in the natural world, and bring it to life,” he says.

Loving the limelight

Etsy trend expert Dayna Isom Johnson sees a rise in interest in “statement lighting” — sculptural pendants, standout sconces, snazzy shades with lots of wow factor. She cites more searches for 1970s-era lamps, decorative lighting, vintage fixtures and colorful pieces.

Statement lighting, she says, “allows folks to spotlight their homes, while doubling as eye-catching artwork.”

Designers of lighting fixtures are getting creative with materials, including fiber, porcelain, glass, fabric, paper and metal.

Some statement lighting has a cosmic vibe. The constellat­ion style comes in configurat­ions big and small, with sticks of LEDs arranged to suggest starry skies.

CB2’s Savina pendant is an alabaster orb with swirls that resembles a planetary gas giant.

And British designer Lee Broom’s Crescent collection includes suspended lighting with illuminate­d acrylic spheres bisected to reveal a brass interior, as though a futuristic space station were opening its door. Broom’s Eclipse fixture melds an acrylic circle with a mirrored one, like two moons meeting.

Peter Bowles, who with son Charlie runs Original BTC, was one of the first to use bone china in lampshade design, over 30 years ago in Oxfordshir­e, England.

“The potter he approached initially thought he was crazy, as they’d only ever made tableware and similar products — never lighting,” says Charlie Bowles.

But he says something special happens when the material meets light.

“Bone china appears pure white once it’s fired, but then gives a lovely warm soft glow when lit,” he says. “Despite its challenges and reputation for being a tricky ceramic to work with, the end result speaks for itself — it’s versatile, fun to design with, and the light you get is soothing and can positively affect your mood.”

This year, the studio introduced Shard, a circular chandelier of handmade tiles, and Pebble, an elegant ceiling fixture formed of dozens of pieces of bone china, polished like river rocks and fastened to form a kind of mineral cocoon.

Arteriors has a collection of pendants crafted from materials like wooden beads, raffia and plant fibers.

A pendant called Jana, for example, was inspired by traditiona­l thatched roofs; brown wicker fringe creates a playful, textured fixture, suspended on an antique brass chain. The Jemai table lamp has a charcoal-hued base formed from ricestone, a fine gravel. The stacked asymmetric­al forms create a groovy ’70s vibe.

Wall art

Carla Regina and James Andrew, who run Regina Andrew Detroit in Michigan, say sconces have been on the uptick with their clientele.

Besides providing light, sconces are wall art and “can quickly transform and update a room,” Regina says.

Their Happy sconce has two white light balls perching playfully atop a smile-shaped tubular base in nickel, rubbed bronze or brass. Their Gotham sconce pairs a sleeve of alabaster with Art Deco brass trim — it’s evocative of that era, yet classicall­y modern.

France & Son’s matte-black Serge sconce is a reproducti­on of the classic mussel-shaped Serge Mouille midcentury fixture.

Inspired by antlers she saw while visiting Jackson Hole, Wyoming, designer Beth Webb had an antler cast in resin and transforme­d into the Jackson sconce, with a white linen shade and nickel backplate.

Apartment dwellers take heart; there are many plug-in or battery-operated sconces that don’t need to be hardwired; just attach them to the wall and use a remote. Schoolhous­e, AllModern, Rejuvenati­on and Lamps Plus all have a wide range of plug-in styles, and battery-operated ones can be found at Wayfair and Amazon.

 ?? ORIGINAL BTC ?? The Pebble light fixture is formed
from dozens of pieces of bone china
by Original BTC Studio.
ORIGINAL BTC The Pebble light fixture is formed from dozens of pieces of bone china by Original BTC Studio.

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