Last Order | ECC

Last Order —

 Flos /Michael
Anastassiades

$1170

On display - enquire to purchase

  • Auckland Showroom
  • Wellington Showroom

Currently not in stock

Estimated delivery: 14 weeks

Flos Last Order table lamp was designed by M.

Anastassiades. It is a rechargeable table lamp that diffuses light through a transparent solid glass base whose shape makes reference to architectural typology of the ancient column. The top cover comes in a combination of different metal and colour finishes: stainless steel, brass, satin copper or green opal coating.
The time required to completely charge the device is 3 hours. With the device turned on at 100% intensity, the cordless autonomy is 6 hours (more than 24 hours of autonomy can be achieved by reducing the intensity). After 6 hours, the intensity automatically decreases to 20% and the need to recharge is indicated.
Photography by Tommaso Sartori and Andrew Jacobs.

Info

  • Dimensions
    Ø100 x H140mm

Designer Profile

Michael Anastassiades

Michael Anastassiades

Michael Anastassiades founded his London design studio in 1994.

Schooled in industrial design and engineering at London's Royal College of Art and Imperial College – the Cypriot-born designer's lighting, mirrors, and tabletop objects reside between industrial design, sculpture and decorative art. Deceptively simple, yet meticulously detailed, they betray his training as a civil engineer and industrial designer.

Anastassiades is particularly renowned for his lighting products, which comprise 80% of his studio's commissions. Shiny surfaces combined with simple geometric shapes like tubes, oblongs and spheres, articulate architectural spaces. He often chooses reflective materials – such as mirrored glass and polished bronze – that appear to dematerialise his objects, to float independently, interacting with the space surrounding them.

Since collaborating with the architectural firm Studio Mumbai (2006), Anastassiades is increasingly working with some of the world's leading architects – including David Chipperfield and John Pawson – and interior designers such as Studio Ilse. His lights can be seen in hotels, restaurants and stores worldwide – including the Grand Hotel Stockholm, Soho House New York and the Sergio Rossi boutiques worldwide.

Featured in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the FRAC Centre in Orleans, France, and the V&A Museum and Crafts Council in London, his designs have also been showcased at world-renowned galleries and arts organisations including London's Institute of Contemporary Arts, the Design Museum, Somerset House and Sotheby's; and Mitterand + Cramer in Geneva. Represented by the Nilufar Gallery in Milan – this follows the gallery's commission to create the ‘Lit Lines’ series of lights (exhibited at Palazzo Durini in 2011) and the ‘Tree in the Moonlight’ lamp which formed part of their Unlimited Collection (2012) .

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