Table Light
This table lamp, designed by Wilhelm Wagenfeld in 1924, is often named the Bauhaus lamp. Wagenfeld was 24 years old, when he was admitted as a journeyman to the Bauhaus workshop in Weimar. Here he designed the first model of this lamp as his solution to an assignment given to him by László Moholy-Nagy. As Wagenfeld said years later, the Bauhaus designs were intended to be industrial products, and indeed looked like them. In fact they were hand-crafted ...
Colors
Today as well, the Wagenfeld table lamp WA 24 continues to be manufactured on this basis, following the original specifications for dimensions and materials. All lamps are consecutively numbered under the base and bear the Bauhaus and TECNOLUMEN logos.
Since 1986 in the shop of the Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Details:
Material: Nickel-plated metal, opal glass screen
Dimensions: 36 cm (height), 16 cm (Ø base), 18 cm (Ø head)
The only copyrighted reedition authorized by Prof. Wilhelm Wagenfeld.
Each lamp is numbered consecutively and bears the TECNOLUMEN / BAUHAUS logo.
Recommended illuminant: LED lamp 7 W, matt
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UrhG (German Copyright Law), articles 2, 3, 8, 23 and 24 – ‘Bauhaus Glass Lamp’ Wilhelm Wagenfeld is the sole copyright holder for legal purposes of the ‘Bauhaus Glass Lamp’, which is primarily characterized by a round glass base-plate, a glass shaft enclosing a metal pipe concealing the electrical lead and a white, almost hemispherically shaped glass shade which conceals the light bulb.
Hamburg Intermediate Court of Appeals, judgement
of 4th March 1999 – 3 U 169/98
Dimensions