The spotlight’s on nature in this year’s International Lighting Exhibition

Light plays an important role in architecture and design. Not only is it necessary in making the environment visible, it also shapes the way we perceive the spaces we’re in. The amount, color, and brightness of light can also affect our mood, and in the long-term, even the quality of our lives.

Part of Salone del Mobile, the world’s biggest furniture design fair, is Euroluce, or the International Lighting Exhibition. Euroluce, too, has become the reference point for lighting trends for the year.

Here are some of the trends spotted this year.

Birds on a wire

Perch light by Umut Yamac. Photo courtesy of The Telegraph.
Perch light by Umut Yamac. Photo courtesy of The Telegraph.
Yanzi by Neri & Hu. Photo courtesy of The Telegraph.

This may as well be a part of the interior design trend of bringing the outdoors in. A number of fixtures presented at Euroluce took the form of birds. Lights are fixed upon “wires” or metal beams, like the Perch light by Umut Yamac, which features origami-like bird figures, or Yanzi by Neri & Hu, where small spheres of light, reminiscent of birds’ heads, are fixed along a series of “branches”.

 

Light as accents

Aside from its basic function to make space visible, light also plays a decorative role. , as seen in the pendant-like pieces seen at Euroluce. These pieces come in seek rings, spheres, or even in the form of illuminated crystals. Or like the Voie lights by Sabine Marcelis, it highlights, quite literally, other prized materials like marble.

 

A mix of elements

Stanley Ruiz the Spektacularis exhibition, “Studio Glass: Method in the Madness” presented by Industry+ at their gallery for Singapore Art Week last January. Also pictured, from left to right are pieces by Stanley Ruiz and Jiri Pacinek: Growth IV, Growth II, Growth VI, and Growth V.
Gabriel Lichauco working at the glass studio in Prague. Pictured is a piece of blown glass.

Veering away from rigid, fixed light structures, blown glass lends a softer form to lamps. Spektacularis, a group formed by Filipino designers Stanley Ruiz, Gabriel Lichauco, and Lilianna Manahan, with Czech glass artist Jiri Pacinek, presented these intricate glassworks and blown glass lamps at the Euroluce. These lamps, with its irregular shapes, make for interesting pieces and will break monotony in an otherwise polished space. 

Gabriel Lichauco at the Spektacularis exhibition, “Studio Glass: Method in the Madness”.
Above: “Amoeba” by Stanley Ruiz and Jiri Pacinek. Below: “Frame” series by Lilianna Manahan and Jiri Pacinek

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Spektacularis’ Stephanie Frondoso (center), with artists Stanley Ruiz and Gabriel Lichauco

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Pieces from the “Frame” series by Lilianna Manahan and Jiri Pacinek

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Works by Spektacularis are available at A-11.

 

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