Beacon was designed by Benjamin Hubert to explore how traditional glass working techniques can be adapted to contemporary use in lighting, and how light itself can be used an integral element to the design.
Designing with light
Benjamin Hubert has launched Beacon, a pendant and desk light that celebrates purity of form and shows how light itself can be used an integral element to the design.
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- 31 January 2015
- Paris
The Beacon lamps celebrate purity of form and comprise two simple and elegant blown glass components – the pendant and desk lamps have the same internal component, but differ in their external component.
The common interior component is hand-blown and then cold-worked using a traditional technique known as battuto, in which the surface of the glass is hand-cut on a girding machine to create a pattern of grindings of variable shape and depth. Light is then projected through the internal component, creating decorative caustics caused by the shadow and highlights of the battuto pattern on the external blown glass component. The external component of both the pendant and desk lamp is sandblasted on the interior to better capture the caustic effect and to diffuse the light. There are four different battuto patterns in the Beacon collection, each creating a different pattern of light and shadow. Beacon has been developed as part of the Glass is Tomorrow workshop held recently in Denizli, Turkey. Glass is Tomorrow is a network that aims to establish an exchange of knowledge between glass and design professionals across Europe. This recent workshop was the fifth edition, and was co-organized with Şişecam Handmade Glass Factory and Istanbul-based glass manufacturer, Nude.
Beacon
Design: Benjamin Hubert
Client: Glass is Tomorrow