Fog & Mørup President Desk Lamp – 1966 Catalogue Picture
1966 was the first year the President appeared in a catalogue. Models: E 7174/1 teak and brass. E 7174/80 aluminium, anthracite & chrome.
Fog & Mørup President Desk Lamp – 1968 Catalogue Picture
On this page of the catalogue, desk lamp models: Lento, Trombone, Senior and President in various versions. Text is in Dutch.
Fog & Mørup President Desk Lamp – 1966 Senior Catalogue Picture
The Senior desk or table lamp, with the convex stem and double glass lampshade in green & purple. The inside lampshade is made of white opal glass. Models: E 7153/1 and E 7153/80.
Lamps In The Movies
Wallander (2008-2016)
A Fog & Mørup President desk lamp was used as a set decoration in the 2008 British television series Wallander. Here in season 1 episode 1. The photo below shows several President desk lamps in the same TV series, an episode later, episode 2. The series broadcast from 2008 to 2016. It was adapted from a Swedish series based on the Swedish novelist Henning Mankell’s Kurt Wallander novels. Starring Kenneth Branagh as the eponymous police inspector, Sarah Smart and Tom Hiddleston.
Many thanks to Max from AfterMidnight for the pictures.
Many thanks to Frank for 2 catalogue pictures.
Many thanks to Hans for a catalogue picture.
Fog & Mørup President Desk Lamp
Materials: Tripod metal base with rectangular teak footrests. Brass & teak rod. Brass mushroom lampshade with elongated slits on top. Some metal parts. 2 white painted Bakelite E27 sockets.
Height: 44 cm / 17.32”
Lampshade: ∅ 37 cm / 14.56”
Base: 18 x 18 cm / 7.08 x 7.08”
Electricity: 2 bulbs E27, 2 x 60 watt maximum, 110/220 volt.
No specific type of light bulb is required; different types can be used.
Period: 1960s, 1970s – Mid-Century Modern.
Designer: Jo Hammerborg around 1966.
Manufacturer:Fog & Mørup A/S, Denmark.
Other versions: The Fog & Mørup President desk or table lamp was made in two versions, as shown in the catalogue pictures: one in brass and teak, and one in aluminium, chrome and anthracite. Here, anthracite most likely refers to the colour rather than the material, with the dark parts probably being made of plastic.
The other very similar lamp is the Senior, which has a convex stem and a double lampshade. The two lamps are often confused online. A lamp that strongly resembles the Senior, and is often sold as such, is a copy made by Massive from Belgium; you can find it here.
Jo Hammerborg
Johannes (Jo) Hammerborg was born on 4 February 1920 in Randers, Denmark. He grew up in a middle-class family, trained as a silversmith in the early 1940s, and during the German occupation took part in the Danish resistance movement as a saboteur. In 1944 he enrolled at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, and in 1949 he began working as a silversmith at Georg Jensen.
In 1957 Hammerborg became head of design at Fog & Mørup, a position he held until 1980. Under his direction, the company experienced its most successful period, both artistically and commercially. He reshaped the visual identity of Fog & Mørup with a modern, highly disciplined design language and strict attention to detail, not only in the lamps themselves, but also in packaging, labelling and presentation.
Hammerborg designed approximately 180 lamps for Fog & Mørup. The first years of his tenure were especially productive: between 1957 and 1963, 24 of those designs were already put into production. His work is characterised by clarity, balance and a strong sense of proportion, qualities often linked to his background as a silversmith.
Outside his work as a designer, Hammerborg was an enthusiastic sportsman, pilot and parachutist. He died on 23 July 1982, aged 62, in a parachuting accident on Bornholm.
Fog & Mørup
Fog & Mørup was founded in 1904 by Ansgar Fog (1880–1930) and Erik Mørup (1879–1972), originally as a metalwork wholesaler. In 1906 the company moved to Copenhagen and gradually developed into one of Denmark’s leading lighting manufacturers. Its strongest creative period began after Jo Hammerborg joined the company in 1957 as head of design, helping to establish Fog & Mørup as a major name in Danish modern lighting.
Designers and architects associated with the company include Jo Hammerborg, Claus Bonderup, Torsten Thorup, Sidse Werner, Sophus Frandsen, Jørgen Bo, E. Balslev, Peter Avondoglio, Karen Clemmensen, Ebbe Clemmensen and Hans Due.
Lyfa
Lyfa was founded in 1903 as Kjøbenhavns Lampe- og Lysekronefabrik. By the mid-20th century it had become one of the most important Danish lighting manufacturers, working with designers such as Bent Karlby, Louis Weisdorf, Piet Hein, Finn Juhl, Nils and Eva Koppel and others. In the late 1970s, Lyfa merged with Fog & Mørup, although both brands continued for a time to be marketed separately.
In the early 1980s, the combined Lyfa–Fog & Mørup business was taken over by Lyskær, after which the Fog & Mørup name gradually disappeared. Lyskaer–Lyfa remained active until 1991, when it was incorporated into Horn Belysning A/S.
Horn Belysning
Horn Belysning A/S, originally E.S. Horn, was founded in 1952 in Aalestrup, Denmark. In 1963 the company adopted the name Horn Belysning. It grew into a major volume producer for the Scandinavian and European market and counted IKEA among its important customers. By the 1980s, Horn was one of the largest lighting companies in Denmark.
In 1991, Horn Belysning acquired Lyskaer–Lyfa, which by then also included brands such as Lyfa, Fog & Mørup and ABO. In 2005, Horn was restructured: the outdoor lighting activities were sold to Nordlux, while the remaining company was relaunched as Lightyears. Lightyears was later acquired by Fritz Hansen.
Lamps In The Movies
A Fog & Mørup President desk lamp was used as a set decoration in the 2011-2018 Swedish-Danish crime television series The Bridge (Bron/Broen). Here in season 4 episode 3 (2018). Starring Sofia Helin, Kim Bodnia and Thure Lindhardt.
Links (external links open in a new window)
Lightyears – Republic of Fritz Hansen
Horn Belysnign history -Danish Vintage Design
The story of Fog & Mørup, Danish modern lighting superstar: www.classic-modern.co.uk/fog_morup
Wallander (2008-2016) TV Series – Wikipedia
Wallander (2008-2016) TV Series – IMDb

































