Grasshopper Floor Lamp
Inspired by:- Greta Grossman
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Dispatched Date | Delivered 10-16 weeks |
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Lead Time | 10 - 12 Weeks |
Original Designer | Greta Grossman |
Featured Product | No |
Five Years Gurantee | No |
Sample Fabric | No |
Heading 1 | A COMBINATION OF SOPHISTICATION AND MODERNITY |
Heading 2 | SENSOUS YET MINIMALIST DESIGN |
Short Description 2 |
Elevate your decor and see your guest's faces light up when they enter your living room with this premium reproduction of Grossman’s Grasshopper Floor Lamp by Mobelaris. Hand made from Copper/Carbon Steel frame and an elongated conical shade that rotates to direct light dowards exuding quiet drama. Available in a number of elegant colors to match your interior. We are so sure you will love your new lamp that we offer a worry-free 12-month manufacturer’s warranty. |
Type of Store Credit value | Select |
- Dimension: Width 30.cm, Depth 43.5cm, Height 125.5 cm
- Packing Dimension: Width 44cm, Depth 134cm, Height 47cm
- CBM: 0.277 Weight: 5.6kg
Product Description
Breaking through gender barriers, Swedish architect and designer Greta Magnusson Grossman designed the Grasshopper Floor Lamp in 1948. The unique tripod stand of the Grasshopper Floor Lamp is tilted backward and gives the impression that the lamp is somehow alive and stalking its prey, a characteristic similar to the insect it was named after. Being one of Grossman’s most iconic designs, the authentic lamp has an elongated conical shade that directs the light downwards. A chic design that brings together the best of industrial inspired contemporary style and the best of sensuous yet minimalist mid-century modern pieces.
Read More Read LessElevate your decor and see your guest's faces light up when they enter your living room with this premium reproduction of Grossman’s Grasshopper Floor Lamp by Mobelaris. Hand made from Copper/Carbon Steel frame and an elongated conical shade that rotates to direct light dowards exuding quiet drama. Available in a number of elegant colors to match your interior. We are so sure you will love your new lamp that we offer a worry-free 12-month manufacturer’s warranty.
Read More Read Less
Breaking through gender barriers, Swedish architect and designer Greta Magnusson Grossman designed the Grasshopper Floor Lamp in 1948. The unique tripod stand of the Grasshopper Floor Lamp is tilted backward and gives the impression that the lamp is somehow alive and stalking its prey, a characteristic similar to the insect it was named after. Being one of Grossman’s most iconic designs, the authentic lamp has an elongated conical shade that directs the light downwards. A chic design that brings together the best of industrial inspired contemporary style and the best of sensuous yet minimalist mid-century modern pieces.
Elevate your decor and see your guest's faces light up when they enter your living room with this premium reproduction of Grossman’s Grasshopper Floor Lamp by Mobelaris. Hand made from Copper/Carbon Steel frame and an elongated conical shade that rotates to direct light dowards exuding quiet drama. Available in a number of elegant colors to match your interior. We are so sure you will love your new lamp that we offer a worry-free 12-month manufacturer’s warranty.
Original Designer
Inspired by :
Greta Grossman
View all products(3)Born Greta Magnuson on 1906 in Helsingborg, Sweden. Greta Grossman was a Swedish furniture designer, interior designer, and architect. She has maintained a prolific forty-year career on two continents: Europe and North America. During the mid-20th century, she was one of the few female designers to gain prominence in the architectural scene. Her pieces made her become the first woman to receive a prize for furniture design from the Swedish Society of Industrial Design. In the midst of the world war II in 1940, they moved to California and she continued to pursue the legacy she started in Sweden and opened a well-publicized shop on Rodeo drive that soon started to attract celebrity clients because of her unique approach to Swedish modernism. Her compact, functional and visually lightweight modern aesthetic won her two prestigious Good Design Awards from MoMA and The National Museum in Stockholm. After retiring in 1960s, she is renowned worldwide for her role in defining the modern aesthetic.
The name Greta Grossman is only used to describe the characteristics of the goods made to the original design, and not as a trademark.