Diabolo

Category
Lighting
Brand
Designer
Dimensions
D 39 cm - H 95 cm
Finiture
Metal
Year
1998
Pendant light with direct lighting designed by A. Castiglioni, composed of a ceiling rose and diffuser. Body in aluminium with external paint in 3 different colour options (shiny white, beaver brown, and cherry red), while the inside of the diffuser is shiny white. The diffuser may be moved vertically from 95 to 210 cm using the cable reel within the ceiling rose.
Flos
For fifty years, Flos has been creating objects of light and igniting generations of dreams. Founded in Merano in 1962 by Dino Gavina and Cesare Cassina, it had a period of strong growth starting in the 1970s: it acquired Arteluce, a historic Italian lighting company, inheriting the designs of Gino Sarfatti, still produced today. In the following decades it absorbed other companies and increasingly expanded the already very rich portfolio of designer lamps. The principles of Flos have always been to identify with the masters of design, to discover new talents, to have technical and technological authority and to integrate into mass culture. Flos has always been a cutting-edge company: experimentation has made it possible to adopt revolutionary materials, such as the cocoon in the past, and more advanced technological solutions, represented today by OLED and sustainable materials.
Achille Castiglioni
Achille Castiglioni, born in Milan in 1918, was an Italian architect and designer. Influenced by the work of his father Giannino, a sculptor who was particularly active between the two wars, he is globally recognized for his "plastic" approach to design. He graduated in architecture at the Polytechnic University of Milan in 1944. Castiglioni often worked for the Triennale of Milan and in 1956 became a founding member of the Industrial Design Association. In the 1960s he was a professor at the Polytechnic University of Turin and set up his personal studio in Milan together with his brother Pier Giacomo, with whom he worked until his premature death in 1968. During his life he held several professorships, which included Industrial Artistic Design and Interior Architecture in Turin and Industrial Design at the Polytechnic of Milan. He continued to work in his studio alone until 2002, year of his death.