The Akari lighting series is characterised by the use of delicate traditional Washi paper wrapped around a lightweight bamboo and steel frame. The collection now comprises over one hundred designs, featuring suspension lights, table lights and floor lights.
This YP1 version has a distinctive pointed shape, contrasting with a flat upper section, creating a one-of-a-kind focal point for any space, ideally utilised in a living room or bedroom.
Isamu Noguchi was an American-Japanese designer who originally trained as a sculptor and brought a sculptural sensibility to everything he created: lighting, furniture, gardens and stage sets. He studied sculpture, after dropping out of medical school, in late 1920s New York and then in Paris as an assistant to Constantin Brancusi.
Noguchi designed a range of paper Akari lights throughout the 1950s and 1960s, alongside the popular organic furniture he made in curvy sculpted wood now part of the Vitra Collection, such as the Freeform Sofa and Coffee Table. He was equally prolific as a landscape architect; he recreated the ancient Buddhist stone gardens he had loved in Kyoto at Lever House in New York (1951), UNESCO in Paris (1951), the Yale campus (1960) and Jerusalem’s Israel Museum (1960).