1950s Cosack Desk Lamp – 1960s Catalogue Picture
This catalogue picture shows the Cosack desk lamp, model 7675. The model received an iF Design Award in 1956.
BJB
The E27 socket of this desk lamp was made by BJB. BJB stands for Brökelmann, Jäger & Busse, today BJB GmbH & Co. KG. The company was founded in 1867 and originally specialised in petroleum lighting. It still exists today and produces LED components, terminal blocks and connectors, lamp holders for conventional lighting, and switches. BJB is active worldwide. BJB GmbH & Co. KG is located at Werler Strasse 1, 59755 Arnsberg, Germany.
VLM Components
The switch was made by VLM Components, a company from Buccinasco, near Milan in Italy. Today, VLM Components is owned by Relco. It is one of the major European suppliers of switches, cords and plugs. VLM Components became especially known for its switches designed by Achille Castiglioni in 1968.
1950s Cosack Desk Lamp
Black and white versions of this 1950s Cosack desk lamp.
1950s Cosack Desk Lamp
Materials: Round cast-iron base, painted with black wrinkle paint. Curved brass rod. Light yellow-painted brass mushroom-style lampshade, painted white inside. Two brass ornamental screws. Brass parts. Brass E27 socket.
Height: 40 cm / 15.74”
Lampshade: ∅ 35 cm / 13.77”
Base: ∅ 15 cm / 5.90”
Electricity: 1 bulb E27, 1 x 75 watt maximum, 110/220 volt.
No specific type of light bulb is required; different types can be used.
Period: 1950s, 1960s – Mid-Century Modern.
Designer: Karl-Heinz Kinsky.
Manufacturer: Gebrüder Cosack, Neheim-Hüsten, Germany.
Other versions: This 1950s Cosack desk lamp was produced in several colours. It is model 7675 and received an iF Design Award in 1956.
Cosack Leuchten (Gebrüder Cosack)
Gebrüder Cosack was a long-established German lighting manufacturer based in Neheim-Hüsten (today part of Arnsberg, North Rhine-Westphalia), one of the historic centres of the German lighting industry. The company is widely regarded as the oldest lamp factory in Neheim.
The firm was founded in 1848 by Theodor Cosack, Egon Cosack and Friedrich Cosack as a metal-processing company in Neheim-Hüsten. In its early years, the business produced lighting equipment, including oil and safety lamps, alongside other metal goods. The company later also operated a foundry, enabling the in-house production of cast metal components.
Archival records document Cosack’s continuous activity from the 19th century onward, including a cashbook covering the years 1872–1882 and a copy book from 1905/06. These sources underline the company’s long industrial history and its early importance within the Neheim lighting industry.
After the Second World War, Gebrüder Cosack repositioned itself and followed a modern design direction. During the post-war years the company briefly used the GECOS name and logo as a form of post-war branding. By the late 1950s the company had returned to using the name Cosack Leuchten, as confirmed by surviving catalogues.
During the post-war decades, Cosack became particularly well known for high-quality interior lighting, often executed in brass and copper, and widely used in restaurants, cafés and public interiors. The company combined solid industrial manufacturing with contemporary design and careful material choices.
Designers associated with Cosack include Gottfried Stürzenhofecker, Ursula Stürzenhofecker, K. H. Kinsky, Hans Wilfried Hegger, Hans-Joachim Groth, Burkhard Panteleit, Joachim O. Becker, Prof. Friedrich Becker, Waldemar Rothe and Jan Armgardt.
Cosack received numerous design awards and is credited with 15 iF Design Awards, confirming its importance within post-war German industrial design. Several Cosack lamps were also exhibited in major design contexts, such as the exhibition “Die gute Industrieform”.
The company is generally reported to have gone bankrupt in 1984. Nevertheless, catalogues from as late as 1989–1990 are known, indicating that Cosack lighting products continued to be marketed into the late 1980s.
Some Cosack lamps were also sold in Belgium, where they appear in catalogues of the Belgian company Boulanger. Cosack lamps also appeared in the catalogues of the American lighting company Koch + Lowy, indicating that several Cosack designs were distributed in the United States.
Note: the name GECOS should be understood as a temporary post-war brand name used by Gebrüder Cosack, not as a separate company and not as the original or permanent company name.
Links (external links open in a new window)
iF Design Award for this Cosack desk lamp
Brökelmann, Jäger und Busse – Wikipedia
Vintageinfo
Black version of this desk lamp
1950s Cosack Crowfoot Desk Lamp
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1960s Adjustable Boulanger Desk Lamp
1960s Chrome Cosack Desk Lamp
1960s Wrinkle Paint Desk Lamp
1970s Cosack Arc Floor Lamp
1980s Chrome Cosack Chandelier
Boulanger Sputnik Floor Lamp
Brass & Acrylic Perforated 1950s Chandelier
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1950s Cosack Crowfoot Desk Lamp
1950s Cosack Diabolo Desk Lamp
1960s Adjustable Boulanger Desk Lamp
1960s Chrome Cosack Desk Lamp
1960s Wrinkle Paint Desk Lamp
1970s Cosack Arc Floor Lamp
1980s Chrome Cosack Chandelier
Boulanger Sputnik Floor Lamp
Brass & Acrylic Perforated 1950s Chandelier
Brass & Acrylic Tripod Desk Lamp
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