Vintageinfo – All About Vintage Lighting

All texts and images are copyright © Vintageinfo.be. Copying is not allowed, including for webshops or commercial use.
All Rights Reserved. Please share by linking, not copying. Thank you!

PayPal

Last 5 Viewed

Design House Disco pendant lamp whirligig UFO spinner orange & white acrylic chrome handle Harvey Guzzini 1960s
Glass globe pendant lamp ornamental chrome chain yellow green hand-blown lampshade 1960s 1970s ItalyGlass Globe Pendant Lamp 1
Glass globe pendant lamp ornamental chrome chain yellow green hand-blown lampshade 1960s 1970s ItalyGlass Globe Pendant Lamp 2
Glass globe pendant lamp ornamental chrome chain yellow green hand-blown lampshade 1960s 1970s ItalyGlass Globe Pendant Lamp 3
Glass globe pendant lamp ornamental chrome chain round metal rings 1960s 1970s ItalyGlass Globe Pendant Lamp 4
Glass globe pendant lamp ornamental chrome chain round metal rings 1960s 1970s ItalyGlass Globe Pendant Lamp 5

Glass globe pendant lamp close up inside view yellow green hand-blown lampshade 1960s 1970s ItalyGlass Globe Pendant Lamp 6
Glass globe pendant lamp ornamental chrome chain yellow green hand-blown lampshade 1960s 1970s ItalyGlass Globe Pendant Lamp 7

Glass Globe Pendant Lamp

Materials: Chromed metal frame (iron) and parts. Chrome chain with round rings, chrome canopy. Yellow, green, amber and clear crystal hand blown Murano glass globe with a slot in the middle. Bakelite E27 socket.

Chain Length: 80 cm / 31.49”

Width: ∅ 35 cm / 13.77”

Electricity: 1 bulb E27, 1 x 60 watt maximum, 110/220 volt.
Anytypeof light bulb canbeused, not a specific one preferred.

Period: 1960s, 1970s – Mid-Century Modern.

Designer: To be appraised.

Manufacturer: To be determined.

Other versions: This glass globe pendant lamp exists in several colours. All these lamps were hand blown and therefore all unique with a little difference in size and colours.

With this type of lamp we always see the name Toni Zuccheri and VeArt or AV Mazzega or Vistosi, as long as it is from Murano… But this type of “dented” glass has existed since the Art Deco period.

Although many people say this, I haven’t found any evidence of this anywhere. Not in a catalogue, never even a label. Judging by the components, it is definitely an Italian lamp.

Do you have an idea? Please let us know through the contact form and help improve the websites exactitude. Your help is much appreciated.

AV Mazzega (Mazzega 1946)

AV Mazzega was founded in Murano in 1946 by Angelo Vittorio Mazzega. Initially devoted to traditional Murano glass, the company shifted in the 1960s toward contemporary lighting design under the leadership of his children Lidia and Gianni Bruno Mazzega.

Gianni Bruno in particular recognized the talent of Carlo Nason, who went on to define the company’s creative direction. With Nason ’s groundbreaking experiments in layered glass and vetro in piastra, AV Mazzega gained international recognition in the 1960s and 1970s. Their lamps became synonymous with Italian design innovation, bridging tradition and modernity.

In 2000, Andrea Mazzega, grandson of the founder, became president. Today the company operates under the name Mazzega 1946, working with leading international designers while continuing to reissue Nason’s classics.

Designers who collaborated with AV Mazzega / Mazzega 1946

Carlo Nason, Aldo Nason, Massimo Rioda, Christophe Pillet, Michele De Lucchi, Giovanni Barbato, Paolo Piva, Sam Baron, Gasmi Chafik, Oriano Favaretto, Michelle Liccese, Gianfranco Gianetti, Amerigo Lorini, Claudio Marturano, Paolo Franzin, Anki Greib, Luisa Bocchietto, Gordon Guilaumier, Oriano Favaretto, Giovanni Barbato and Riccardo Giovannetti, among others.