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Metalarte pendant lamp 2916 industrial style green metal & glass lampshade black handle 1970s design: Enrique Franch Spain
Metalarte pendant lamp 2916 industrial style green metal & glass lampshade black handle 1970s design: Enrique Franch SpainMetalarte Pendant Lamp 2916 3
Metalarte pendant lamp 2916 green metal & clear & opal glass lampshade white inside 1970s design: Enrique Franch Spain Metalarte Pendant Lamp 2916 4
Metalarte pendant lamp 2916 industrial style green metal & glass lampshade black handle 1970s design: Enrique Franch SpainMetalarte Pendant Lamp 2916 1
Metalarte pendant lamp 2916 green metal & opal glass lampshade black handle 1970s design: Enrique Franch Spain Metalarte Pendant Lamp 2916 2
Metalarte pendant lamp 2916 round black ceiling cap - canopy 1970s design: Enric (Enrique) Franch Miret, Barcelona, Spain Metalarte Pendant Lamp 2916 5
Metalarte pendant lamp 2916 industrial style green metal & glass lampshade black handle top view 1970s design: Enric Franch Miret Spain Metalarte Pendant Lamp 2916 6
Metalarte pendant lamp 2916 industrial style green metal & glass lampshade black handle + shipping box 1970s design: Enric Franch Miret Spain Metalarte Pendant Lamp 2916 7

Metalarte Pendant Lamp 2916

Materials: Industrial style grass green painted metal lampshade, painted white inside. Clear and opal glass diffusser below. Black painted metal handle on top. Steel wire, some metal parts. Porcelain E27 socket.

Cord Length: 120 cm / 47.24”

Height: 56,5 cm / 22.24”

Lampshade: ∅ 49,5 cm / 19.48”

Electricity: 1 bulb E27, 1 x 100 watt maximum, 110/220 volt.
Any type of light bulb can be used, not a specific one preferred.

Period: 1970s – Mid-Century Modern.

Designer: Enrique Franch.

Manufacturer: Metalarte, Paseo de la Ribera 115, Canovelles, Barcelona, Spain.

Other versions: This Metalarte pendant lamp 2916 comes in 2 colours: Grass green 54 and bright red 60.

Enrique Franch

Enric (Enrique) Franch Miret (Barcelona, 1943 – 31 March 2024) was an influential Catalan industrial designer, exhibition designer and educator. In Metalarte catalogues and some international sources he is credited as “Enrique Franch”, but this is simply the Castilian version of his name – it refers to the same designer.

Franch trained at several Barcelona institutions, including the Escola de Pèrits Industrials, the Escola Massana, the Faculty of Fine Arts of the University of Barcelona and the Higher School of Social Sciences, and later completed further specialist studies abroad.

He began his professional activity in 1968 and soon became involved in the emerging Catalan design scene. He was a member of major design organisations such as ADP, ADI-FAD, BEDA and the Design Research Society, and served on the board of FAD from 1976 to 1979 under the presidency of architect Antoni de Moragas.

From the early 1970s he directed DPC (Disseny / Diseño i Produccions Culturals), a studio focused on integrated design, communication and cultural projects for both private industry and public institutions. Much of his career was devoted to exhibition design and museography: among many projects he worked on the heritage plan and visitor facilities for Cardona (Parc Cultural de la Muntanya de la Sal and Centre Cardona Medieval), the image and museological projects for the Museu Nacional de la Ciència i de la Tècnica de Catalunya in Terrassa, and several museum and exhibition programmes in Asturias, including the Museu del Poble d’Astúries and the masterplan for the region’s network of ethnographic museums.

Franch was also active as a curator, notably for the Primavera del Disseny cycles in 1995 and 1997 and the International Forum Barcelona Primavera del Disseny in 1997.

In parallel he developed an important teaching career, especially at ELISAVA, Escola Superior de Disseny de Barcelona (1985–2006), and he lectured widely in Spain and internationally.

He published numerous articles and essays on design, communication, exhibitions and museums, and was regarded by colleagues as both an intellectual and a practicing designer.

In product and lighting design, Franch is best remembered for his collaboration with Metalarte, where he worked as a freelance designer between 1969 and 1979.

His most iconic piece is the “Calder” halogen table lamp (1974/75), a sculptural counterbalanced desk lamp with a long oscillating arm and conical base. The Calder was Metalarte’s first halogen lamp and became the first Spanish design to enter the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York, as well as being held by the Design Museum of Barcelona.

Through his combination of rigorous thinking, cultural engagement and formally innovative objects such as the Calder lamp, Enric (Enrique) Franch Miret left a lasting mark on Spanish and international design.