Original switch from A.A.G. Stucchi, the company’s founding members are Aristide, Arturo and Giuseppe Stucchi.
www.aagstucchi.it/en/company/history (link opens in a new window)
A.A.G. Stucchi is +- 250 km from Venice in the city of y.
La Murrina Table or Floor Lamp
Materials: Big globe made of thick Murano hand-blown crystal clear glass with white stripes. Tubular fabric lampshade. 2 Bakelite sockets.
Height: 74 cm / 29.13”
Height base: 32 cm / 12.59”
Width: ∅ 38 cm / 14.96”
Electricity: 1 bulb E27, 1 x 75 watt maximum. 1 bulb E14 – 1 x 60 watt maximum, 110/220 volt. Any type of light bulb can be used, not a specific one preferred. This table lamp has an E14 socket in the base and an E27 socket on top of the base. They work separate or together. It has a double switch (photo on the left).
Period: 1960s, 1970s – Mid-Century Modern.
Designer: To be appraised.
Manufacturer: La Murrina, Murano Italy – attributed.
Other versions: This La Murrina table lamp comes in several colours.
La Murrina
La Murrina is an Italian company known for high-end Murano glass lighting and decorative objects, combining traditional glassmaking techniques with contemporary design and modern production methods.
The origins of La Murrina go back to the 1960s on the island of Murano, where a small furnace was operated by a group of master glassmakers. In this early phase, the production consisted mainly of prestigious blown-glass objects created by the furnace owners themselves.
In 1974, the furnace came under the control of a family from Milan, already active in the production of lighting in glass and metal. From that moment on, the company was managed as a structured corporation, and the “La Murrina” trademark was registered internationally. Its collections were gradually distributed worldwide.
Around the year 2000, La Murrina expanded its activities through collaborations with architects and designers, introducing contemporary collections while continuing to rely on traditional Murano glassblowing techniques.
La Murrina S.R.L. operates in the high-end interior and lighting market, producing both standard collections and custom-made projects for private residences, hotels, and commercial interiors. The company positions itself in the luxury segment, where craftsmanship, technical know-how, and Italian design culture play a central role.
This company overview is based on historical corporate material and archived website content. The former official website (lamurrina.com) is no longer under the control of the company; archived versions can be consulted via the Wayback Machine.
Early designer attribution
An early La Murrina catalogue (circa 1974) includes a dedicated designer index explicitly attributing individual models to named designers and glassmakers. Among the designers listed are Peter Peisel, Potenza & Pelzel, Alessandro Lenarda, Gandini, and Lino Tagliapietra, each associated with specific article numbers.
Designers credited in recent years
In more recent catalogues, La Murrina occasionally credits external designers. The following names appear in published company material from the late 1990s onward: Samuele Mazza, Alessandro La Spada, Roberto Serio, Adriana Lohmann, Federico Visani, Oscar Tusquets, Giugiaro Architettura, Sottsass Associati, Marco Piva, Denis Santachiara, Matteo Thün & Antonio Rodriguez.
Links (external links open in a new window)
History of the La Murrina company
Murano glass blowing – Wikipedia
The glass museum on the Murano island

























