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JUMO UFO Desk Lamp Model 1300

Materials: Orange painted round flat iron base & folded rod. Adjustable orange and white painted UFO style lampshade made of two aluminium parts. Some iron parts. Brass E14 socket with a porcelain ring.

Height: 26 cm / 10.23”

Lampshade: ∅ 22 cm / 8.66”

Base: ∅ 12 cm / 4.72”

Electricity: 1 bulb E14, 1 x 40 watt maximum, 110/220 volt.
Any type of light bulb can be used, not a specific one preferred.

Period: 1950s, 1960s – Mid-Century Modern.

Designer: André Mounique.

Manufacturer: JUMO, Bagnolet, Paris, France.

Other versions: This JUMO UFO desk lamp exists in several colours and variations. The design of the lampshade is reminiscent to a design by the Italian designer Oscar Torlasco for Lumi, his model 567 desk lamp fom 1959.

JUMO

The French JUMO company was founded in the 1940s by Yves Jujeau and Pierre and André Mounique as “Société Nouvelle des Etablissements JUMO” (New Society of JUMO Establishments). The name of the company is derived from the two first letters of each name. It was located in Bagnolet, near the capital Paris.

The lamps made by the company are never labelled, but often the engraved model number can be found in the cast iron counterweight of the base. Most of the lamps are good recognizably by certain elements specific to this brand such as the lampshades, joints and base.

JUMO lamps were designed for offices and exists in many models. Many imitations were made over the years. The JUMO lamps were a big success. Not every chrome desk lamp is a JUMO lamp.

At the end of the seventies JUMO was bought the English Concord Lighting International Ltd (founded in 1968 by the famous Rotaflex company). The name changed in JUMO Concord. The company was relocated and disappeared in the 1980s.

Lucidus Bloc

The famous Lucidus Bloc foldable lamp, designed in 1945 is officially a real JUMO lamp. It was patented in the USA by André Mounique as a “retractable office lamp”. Mounique was the main designer of the company.

The design of this lamp was protected until 1965. In the 1980s the first copies were assembled in Japan. In 2014, after having worked on prototypes for three years, the Parisian company New JUMO Concept took the lamp back into production. New steel press moulds were made for the Bakelite parts based on an original model. They named it Classique (Classic). Today (2022), the website is no longer online.

Several JUMO models are very sought after because of the attribution to certain designers of the 20th century. But all these attributions are wrong and fictional. Neither Charlotte Perriand, nor Eileen Gray have designed a lamp for the company. Historians are very clear about it.

Eileen Gray

The name Eileen Gray is associated with JUMO by many auction houses, but all her works are from before World War II. After the war she did not design anymore and led a reclusive life. No archive, documentation or biography shows the JUMO model 71 desk lamp in Gray’s work. Also, it is impossible to date it before 1950, considering the parts of the lamp.

Gustave Miklos

The “JUMO Lucidus Bloc” retractable desk lamp is often attributed to the Hungarian sculptor Gustave Miklos, also in well known lamp books, and nicknamed “Bolide“. Bolide is the name of a bronze sculpture he made in 1924. The lamp has some similarities. According to his biography, he never designed a lamp.

Autrefois La Lumière

For a long time, there was an excellent detailed website about the JUMO lamps and other (industrial) German and French lamps, called Autrefois La Lumière (Formerly Light), made by Alix Jaltier. Unfortunately, the website no longer exists.

VLM Components

All the electric parts were made by VLM Components. VLM Components was founded in 1945 in Buccinasco, a small village near Milan, Italy. VLM Components is part of the Relco Group, founded in 1967. Today they are the owners of the brands Relco, Leuci, Relco Lighting, VLM Components and Segno. VLM Components became famous for the switches they produce which were designed by Achille Castiglioni in 1968.

Lamps in the movies!

A gold coloured JUMO UFO desk lamp with a the same lampshade, but another base, was used as a prop in the Italian crime TV mini series Maltese – Il Romanzo del Commissario from 2017. Starring Kim Rossi Stuart and Rike Schmid.

Jumo UFO Desk Lamp prop Maltese (2017) Film