Skip to content

Parlia­ment Floor Lamp

c. 1963

by Le Corbusier
for Nemo Lighting

Parlia­ment Floor Lamp Designed by Le Corbusier for Nemo Light­ing. Le Corbusier designed the Parlia­ment floor lamp for the Chandi­garh Palace of Assem­bly in India in 1963. The floor lamp features an adjustable double diffuser that can tilt by 180˚ and also rotates 345˚ The painted aluminum diffusers are avail­able in a combi­na­tion of either matt black with yellow or white­wash with grey. The stem and base are finished in a contrast­ing matt grey.

Video

Le Corbusier

Switzerland (1887–1965)

There are perhaps only a handful of people who truly changed the way the 20th Century looked, and Le Corbusier was without a doubt one of them. A self-taught polymath in the fields of architecture, philosophy, and design, Le Corbusier was among the very first to encourage the use of tubular steel and concrete, and certainly a master of those materials. His work emphasizes profile over ornament, with a firm belief that simple geometric forms are best.

Born Charles-Edouard Jeanneret-Griss in 1887, by the age of twenty he’d relocated from Switzerland to Paris, shortened his name to Le Corbusier, and designed his first house. Le Corbusier went on to conceive the International Style, a philosophy that favored open floor plans, concrete structures raised on support pillars, and horizontal windows instead of ornamented facades. Buildings like his Radiant City in Marseille remain the ne plus ultra of Modernism and prefigured Brutalism, influencing generations of architects to come. And his furniture has grown even more influential since his death in 1965. Seating like his steel-and-hide LC1 chair are, while radical in their day, are now like timeless classics, often imitated but never bettered.

More in Lighting

View All

More in Le Corbusier

View All