Sergio Asti Daruma Table Lamp – FontanaArte Candle Catalogue Picture
Links (external links open in a new window)
Daruma table lamp – FontanaArte website
MoMA museum New York – Daruma table lamps
Sergio Asti – FontanaArte website
Other lamps designed by Sergio Asti on Vintageinfo
Martinelli Luce Profiterole table lamp
Raak UFO recessed ceiling lamp
Candle lamps
FontanaArte lamps
Studio Beretta Associati Passion table lamp
Richard Carruthers Salice desk lamp
Catalogues
Daruma table lamp – FontanaArte catalogue
FontanaArte – Candle 1957–2000 catalogue
1960s Candle lighting catalogue
Sergio Asti Daruma Table Lamp
Materials: White opal polished hand blown open glass globe base. Half round opal glass lampshade. Some metal parts. White Bakelite E27 socket.
Height: 24 cm / 9.05”
Width: ∅ 23 cm / 4.72”
Electricity: 1 bulb E27, 1 x 60 wattmaximum, 110/220 volt.
Anytypeof light bulb canbeused, but an opal one is preferred.
Period: 1960s – Mid-Century Modern.
Designer: Sergio Asti in 1968.
Manufacturer: Candle – FontanaArte S.p.A., Alzaia Trieste, 49, 20094 Corsico, near Milan, Italy.
Other versions: This Sergio Asti Daruma table lamp comes in 6 sizes, as you can see in the catalogue picture. These table lamps are still for sale. You can order them via the FontanaArte website.
Sergio Asti
Sergio Asti was born in Milan, Italy in 1926. He studied at the same school as Gae Aulenti, the Politecnico di Milano ( Milan School of Architecture of the Polytechnic University). After graduating in Architecture in 1953, he spent five years as Assistant Professor of Interior Design. He is one of the founders of the ADI, the Associazione per il Disegno Industriale (Association for Industrial Design).
Many objects designed by Sergio Asti are present in the collections of the most important museums around the world and he received numerous awards.
He designed lamps for Artemide, Candle, FontanaArte, Raak, Knoll International, Arteluce, Kartell, Bilumen, C.I.L. Roma, Poltronova, Martinelli Luce and several others.
Candle
Candle Illuminazione was an Italian lighting manufacturer based in Milan, founded in the mid-1950s. The company became known for bold, sometimes eccentric and futuristic designs.
Over the decades, Candle worked with a wide range of designers. Names associated with Candle include, among others: Vico Magistretti, Gae Aulenti, Sergio Asti, M. Ferrari, Jonathan De Pas, Donato D’Urbino, Paolo Lomazzi, A. Fornaroli, G. Botturi, S. Lo Bianco – Bocola, Fernando and Humberto Campana, Angelo Mangiarotti, Giotto Stoppino, Allesandro Pianon, Giorgio and Max Pajetta, Rodolfo Bonetto,Riccardo Giovanetti, Francesco Gobbi, Luciano Pagani and Angelo Perversi, Charles Williams, Jonathan Daifuku, Silvio Caputo, Tim Power, Pierluigi Cerri, Christophe Pillet, and many more.
Company locations
Candle ’s original headquarters and showroom were located at Via Ariberto 24, 20123 Milan, an address that appears in company catalogues of the late 1960s and early 1970s. From 1 April 1973, the company officially relocated to a new and larger site at Via Salaino 7, 20144 Milan. This address formed part of a broader industrial complex historically associated with Candle, including production-related facilities such as storage areas and service buildings.
In addition to its Milan base, Candle maintained affiliated showrooms in Rome (Via Monte Brianzo 56) and Turin (Piazza Arbarello 7), reflecting the company’s national presence within Italy during its most active period.
In 1993, FontanaArte acquired Candle and developed it as an additional division/line aimed at a younger audience, with projects by upcoming designers and more competitive pricing, supported by newer materials and production processes.
The Candle name is no longer commonly used as an independent brand; Candle designs and production are generally presented under FontanaArte.
FontanaArte
FontanaArte was founded in Milan in 1932 by Luigi Fontana and Giò Ponti (1891 – 1979). The company is known for the processing of curved glass and for the production of lighting equipment, becoming over the years a prominent name for Italian design.
Giò Ponti invites Pietro Chiesa (1892 – 1942) to join him in the art direction. Chiesa is a distinguished glass master who enlists the craftsmen from his own workshop to join him to the company. Gio Ponti designed the 0024 pendant lamp and the Bilia table lamp in 1931.
Pietro Chiesa’s most famous lamp at that time is the Luminator, designed in 1933, in 1937 the 006.
In 1954, Max Ingrand, a French glass master and decorator, renowned for his stunning stained-glass church windows, becomes the art director. He designed the Fontana table lamp.
Gio Pontibecomes again art director in 1967 and he designs a new collection of lamps, the Pirellina and Pirellone table lamps.
Gae Aulenti becomes the art director in 1979. Her first move is to makeover the collection. She is flanked by Piero Castiglioni, Pierluigi Cerri, Daniela Puppa and Franco Raggi. The Parola table lamp is born in 1980.
In 1993 FontanaArte acquires Candle, another Italian lighting brand.
The list of designers that worked for the company is infinite. You can find the majority over here on the FontanaArte website.
Many thanks to Lluís from Eclectique Vintage for the photos.












