POUL HENNINGSEN (1894-1967)
POUL HENNINGSEN (1894-1967)
1 More
Please note that at our discretion some lots may b… Read more
POUL HENNINGSEN (1894-1967)

'Light of The Future', A Rare Ceiling Light

Details
POUL HENNINGSEN (1894-1967)
'Light of The Future', A Rare Ceiling Light
produced by Louis Poulsen, Copenhagen, Denmark
painted aluminium, cast aluminium, porcelain
each panel stamped with configuration number and letter combination
26 x 24 in. (66 x 61 cm.)
Executed 1959. This work is from the commission of 20 examples.
Provenance
Louis Poulsen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Acquired from the above by the present owner.
Literature
Other examples illustrated:
T. Jørstian and P.E. Munk Nielsen, PH 100 Light, exh. cat., Danish Museum of Art & Design, Copenhagen, 1994, pp. 13, 18 for period illustration of the lamps in situ.
T. Jørstian, P. E. Munk Nielsen, eds., Light Years Ahead, The story of the PH lamp, Copenhagen, 1994, p. 295, another example illustrated, p. 96 for a period illustration of the lamp in situ.
E. Steffensen, Poul Henningsen, Denmark, 2005, p. 80.
Exhibited
Forum Copenhagen, The House of the Day after Tomorrow, Spring 1959.
Special Notice
Please note that at our discretion some lots may be moved immediately after the sale to our storage facility at Momart Logistics Warehouse: Units 9-12, E10 Enterprise Park, Argall Way, Leyton, London E10 7DQ. At King Street lots are available for collection on any weekday, 9.00 am to 4.30 pm. Collection from Momart is strictly by appointment only. We advise that you inform the sale administrator at least 48 hours in advance of collection so that they can arrange with Momart. However, if you need to contact Momart directly: Tel: +44 (0)20 7426 3000 email: pcandauctionteam@momart.co.uk.

Brought to you by

Jeremy Morrison
Jeremy Morrison

Lot Essay

Derived from the celebrated ‘Artichoke’ pendant designed in 1958, this variation was developed by Poul Henningsen for the ‘House of the Day after Tomorrow’ exhibition held the following year at Forum, Copenhagen. The installation was spearheaded by architect Ole Helweg who entrusted the lighting design of the pavilion to the expert hands of Poul Henningsen. With the Louis Poulsen workshop and its quality craftsmanship at his disposal, the designer drew directly from his deep technical understanding of the light spectrum, which had greatly influenced his style and designs since the beginning of his career.

The present model enhances the techniques Henningsen had implemented with the creation of the Paris lamp, designed in 1925 for the Exposition Internationale, where the lightbulb is skilfully concealed behind the elegant metal housing, yielding ambient luminosity originating solely from reflection of the direct light rays on the surrounding panels. For the ‘Future’ project Henningsen used his knowledge of the spectrum ray not only to execute a technically complete pendant but to give free expression to his creativity as a designer. The pendant is composed of trapezoids of aluminium rotating as a spiral, and horizontally subdivided into three sections using different colour paint. The colour choices were, as much as every small detail of Poul Henningsen’s work, not the result of a spontaneous inspiration but a carefully planned arrangement. In response to ultraviolet light – as opposed to incandescent light – the coloured panels of the pendant replicate the colour scale of the ray spectrum. With the production of the model limited to 20 examples, the 'Light of The Future' pendant represents a rare expression for the designer’s experimental creativity, and was far from his mass-production designs, a light sculpture as much as product design.

In 1959 the ‘House of the Day after Tomorrow’ was captured by a British film crew working for Pathé News. As is so often the case, aspirations towards the future reveal more about the present than any aspirational destiny, no matter how ambitious it may have seemed at the time. The short film records elaborately-coiffed guests sipping tea to a live soundtrack supplied by a raucous ragtime jazz band. The scene is unquestionably the late 1950s. From the vaulted timber ceiling hangs a constellation of illuminated, flat-bladed satellites – Henningsen’s pendants – no less striking today than the day they were created, and the surest manifestation of what ‘the future’ might be.

More from Masterpieces of Design and Photography

View All
View All