SCULPTURAL LIGHTINGS

Made in France using a diversity of traditional artisanal techniques and innovative methods, these unique sculptural lighting pieces combine radical design with conceptuality. 

Discover THE STORY

behind each piece…

"During my first trip to Kyoto, I had the privilege of being initiated into the art of the samurai, both through the practice of the Katana and Zen. The bamboo mat, rolled and soaked in water, is used to replicate the consistency of a human arm or leg. The clean and immediate cut is made possible by the combination of the blade's sharpness, speed, and, most importantly, a perfectly mastered angle of attack.

This beveled cylindrical shape has etched itself into my memory and came back to me during my first sketches of lighting fixtures."

Hadrien HACH

Frozen Katana

The Frozen Katana model plays with the transparency of fibers crystallized by resin. Light diffuses through it, delicately clinging to the glass’s textured surfaces. The base is gilded with gold leaf in an upward gradient that complements the room’s illumination.

Dark Katana

The Dark Katana model unites opposites and contrasts: The golden interior responds to the black exterior, the black resin is both matte and glossy, and the lampshade’s opacity contrasts with the reflection of the gilding. The light is projected vertically, like a column of light.

Ghost Spirit

During the Italian Renaissance, draperies used as models in artists’ studios were petrified with plaster. Here, resin freezes the old cotton cloth, giving it an almost magical transparency and rigidity.


Also reminiscent of children’s games, this friendly ghost poetically inhabits interiors both day and night.

Cappuccio Dorato

Halfway between the aesthetics of drapery and mummy bandages, I envisioned this lamp as a small, hooded being — cappuccio in Italian. The gold leaf gilding reflects and warmly directs the inner light. When switched off, the shadowed interior of the cappuccio is filled with mystery and humanity.

ManaRatan

The ManaRatan lamp, whose name means "lighthouse" in Arabic, draws inspiration from the vernacular architecture of Africa and the Middle East. Much like a lighthouse, which guides travelers through the unknown, ManaRatan symbolizes how light guides humanity through space.

Its truncated cone shape provides great stability, contrasting with the airy lightness of the fiberglass. Light diffuses subtly through it, gently clinging to the roughness of the material. At its summit, horizontal steel bars intersect, adding a graphic touch.