New York Magazine

BEST BETS: LAMP SHOW

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1. ALTAR 6, $850

Laila Lott, a designer and jeweler, grew up attending Coptic Orthodox church services with her family, and this lamp is inspired by the smoke rituals she saw there. It’s made of wood and ceramic tiles with a salvaged church bulb in the center.

2. MELLOW GLOW NO. 4: LOUNGER, $1,200

This is part of an ongoing series by Ryan Patrick Martin, a Ridgewoodb­ased painter and sculptor. “It was tricky,” he says. “At first, the base was a solid purple and the ball was a darker blue, but I tend to overwork things until they get loud and crazy. That happened here when I poured on the blood-orange epoxy resin.”

3. ELEPHANT, $1,500

Father and stepson designers Samuel Lambert and Darius Laprise made the strips of aluminum needed for this lamp “like pasta—we extruded it.” They didn’t initially intend to call it Elephant, but once they noticed the similariti­es, “we decided to give a little animated, playful name to an otherwise kind of cold, static object.”

4. MUTUA, $390

Mexican design studio Bestia only uses raw materials. The rock that serves as the base of this lamp, for instance, was sourced from a volcano on the outskirts of Mexico City.

5. HEAD LAMP, $450

This lamp, made of wood with a faux-marble finish, is one of designer Jeremy Gecker’s first dabbles in lighting. It’s remotecont­rolled, so it’s possible to change the head’s hue from blue to purple to yellow to red.

6. SOCKET, $175

“A hard day’s work is over when the socks come off,” says prop stylist and set designer Selena Liu. “So this light is my ode to the beautiful sensation of taking one’s gross socks off.” It is constructe­d from soldered steel and rice paper.

7. BURNING DOWN THE HOUSE, $300

“We wanted to examine the feeling of being drawn into, but still repelled by, watching something burn,” says Rhonda Weppler, a Canadian artist who created this with her partner, Richard Winchell. The house is made of cardboard and wood, and the flames are tiny LEDs.

8. SOUL CRUSHING VICTORY, $10,000

“We wanted to do something a little grotesque and also a little funny,” says Cole Bennett, who owns a bicycle-fabricatio­n facility. He and his girlfriend, public defender Grayson Bland, made this ceramic piece depicting a naked man standing in a tub filled with gold coins. Regarding the especially high price point: “Look at the prices in the art world right now. Who’s to say that it isn’t worth that?”

9. LITHOPHYTE SPECIES (1 OF 9), $800

Jake Coan, a lighting designer, typically uses bamboo to make large-scale ceiling lights, but he scaled things down this year to form a single crumbled leaf out of rice paper from Pearl River Mart in Soho. “It’s inspired by suiseki, the display of ornamental rocks, as well as ikebana. One line, one leaf—that’s enough to be a centerpiec­e.”

10. HANNAH PENDANT, $1,100

Jimmy Mezei, a Canadian multidisci­plinary artist, made this with a kiln he found on Craigslist early in the pandemic. He had initially planned to make a light in the shape of a shuttlecoc­k but couldn’t get it to work technicall­y, so he reformed the clay into a banana and glazed it yellow.

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