Kazuo Motozawa Saturno Pendant Lamp
Saturno table lamp in chrome.
Lamps In The Movies
Legado En Los Huesos (2019)
2 Kazuo Motozawa Saturno table lamps, the same as above, were used as a prop in the 2019 Spanish supernatural crime-thriller film Legado En Los Huesos (The Legacy of the Bones). Starring Marta Etura, Leonardo Sbaraglia and Álvaro Cervantes. This film is a sequel to the 2017 film El Guardián Invisible (The Invisible Guardian). The sequel to this film titled Ofrenda A La Tormenta (Offering to the Storm). Many lamps appear in these 3 films. Most lamps appear in the third film. The Kazuo Motozawa Saturno table lamp also appears in the third movie, but you only see 1 lamp.
Le Fantôme de la Liberté (1974)
A Kazuo Motozawa Saturno table lamp was used as a prop in the 1974French surrealist comedy drama film Le Fantôme de la Liberté (The Phantom of Liberty). Starring Adriana Asti, Julien Bertheau and Jean-Claude Brialy. Here together with a Harvey Guzzini Forma table lamp. More info about this table lamp over here.
Many thanks to Frank from nullviernull raum+kommunikation for the pictures. You can find his shop over here on Pamono.
Kazuo Motozawa Saturno Pendant Lamp
Materials: Stacked chromed metal (iron) slat rings lampshade. Painted white inside. Round chrome lid on top. Chrome tube. Some metal parts. Bakelite E27 socket.
Cord Length: 70 cm / 27.55”
Height: 50 cm / 19.68”
Width: ∅ 18 cm / 7.08”
Electricity: 1bulb E27, 1 x 75 watt maximum, 110/220 volt.
Anytypeof light bulb canbeused, not a specific one preferred.
Period: 1970s – Mid-Century Modern.
Designer: Kazuo Motozawa around 1970.
Manufacturer: Yamagiwa Corporation, Japan.
Other versions: This Kazuo Motozawa Saturno pendant lamp exists in several versions. Also table lamps were made. The table lamp exists also in white, you can find it over here. A similar pendant lamp is named Aureola. It is thicker and shorter.
The Areola table lamps were relaunched for a while around 2010. Pricing was +- 270 euro/dollar.
Staff models 5633 and 5639 won an iF Design Award in 1971. This one is model 5631.
These lamps were all made by the Japanese lighting company Yamagiwa. In Europe these lamps were sold by Staff & Schwarz from Germany.
Kazuo Motozawa
Kazuo Motozawa was born in Saitama, near Tokyo, Japan in 1945. He graduated from the Musashino Junior College Craft and Industrial Design Department in 1968. After his studies he designed several lamps for Yamagiwa. From 1977 until 1985 he was the director of LD Yamagiwa Laboratory. In 1987 Motozawa established HALO Design Laboratory, Inc. Kazuo Motozawa exhibited frequently and achieved many awards.
Yamagiwa
The Yamagiwa corporation was founded in 1923 by Hirofumi Yamagiwa (1900-1947). Yamagiwa is the leading Japanese lighting manufacturer. The company also sells lighting from several lamp producers from around the globe. Among others: FLOS, Frank Lloyd Wright, Louis Poulsen, Artemide, Hans-Agne Jakobsson, Le Klint, Anglepoise, Tom Dixon and many more. Yamagiwa is part of Maruwa Co., Ltd.
Kazuo Motozawa Aureola Table Lamps – re-edition
Kazuo Motozawa
Staff
Staff Leuchten – Staff & Schwarz Leuchtenwerke (lighting plant) was founded in 1945 in Lemgo, (West) Germany by Alfred Staff (1908–1989) and Otto Schwarz (1902–1951). After the war they left the Soviet occupation zone and set up a small three-man business in Lemgo producing consumer goods in wood and metal, repair work and pesticide against the Colorado potato beetle. The location in Westphalia-Lippe was chosen deliberately: the area already had veneer and lighting manufacturers, which made it a natural base for a new lighting company.
In 1946 Staff produced its first wrought-iron lamps, followed by large orders for spa complexes in the region. After the death of Otto Schwarz in 1951,Alfred Staff took over all shares and shifted the focus from project lighting to serial production of innovative, design-oriented luminaires.
From the late 1950s onwards the company became one of Germany’s most decorated lighting manufacturers. Staff was among the first winners of the “Gute Industrieform” (today iF Design) awards at the Hanover Fair, and over the next three decades collected more than 200 design prizes. In the 1960s the firm built up an international sales network, introduced the Variolux electronic dimmer (1966) and launched Lite-Trac (1967), one of the first VDE-compliant track lighting systems, which helped to position Staff as a pioneer in architectural and technical lighting.
Staff collaborated with numerous designers, including Rolf Krüger, Motoko Ishii, Kazuo Motozawa, Arnold Berges, Gerhard Beigel, Alfred Kalthoff and others. Several Japanese designs originally created for Yamagiwa – such as Motozawa’s Saturno series – were marketed in Europe by Staff, while some Staff models were licensed to other brands. In the 1970s the company published a joint catalogue with Stilnovo, and lamps from Staff appeared in catalogues from Raak, the Netherlands, and the Danish Lyfa, among others.
In the early 1990s the Austrian Zumtobel Group gradually acquired the company: in 1993 it took a majority stake, and by 1994 owned 100% of the shares. The lighting activities were continued under the brand Zumtobel Staff, with the Staff name remaining in use until 2006. The Lemgo factory is still one of Zumtobel’s key production sites for spotlights and lighting systems.
Links (external links open in a new window)
2018-2019 Yamagiwa catalogue
History of the Staff company can be found here:
60 Years of Light from Lemgo – Zumtobel plant celebrates historic milestones
Pendant lamp model 5633/S on the iF Design Award website
Pendant lamp model 5639/S on the iF Design Award website
Le Fantôme de la Liberté (1974) film – Wikipedia
Le Fantôme de la Liberté (1974) film – IMDb
Legado En Los Huesos (2019) Film – Wikipedia
Legado En Los Huesos (2019) Film – IMDb
Vintageinfo
Brass Saturno pendant lamp – Mushroom version
Oyster wall lamp – Dieter Witte
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