Sciolari Cubic Wall Lamp
Materials: Brushed aluminium square beam. Square pressed clear crystal glass lampshades. Some plastic parts. Bakelite E14 sockets.
Height: 20 cm / 7.87”
Width: 8 cm / 3.14”
Depth: 9,5 cm / 3.74”
Electricity: 2 bulbs E14, 2 x 40 watt maximum, 110/220 volt.
Any type of light bulb can be used, not a specific one preferred. For this setup silver cupped bulbs were used.
Period: 1970s, 1980s, Mid-Century Modern.
Designer: Gaetano Sciolari (1927-1994).
Manufacturer: Sciolari Illuminazione, Rome and Milan, Italy.
Other versions: This Sciolari Cubic wall lamp exists in many variations. Also made as a table lamp, several floor lamps and chandeliers. They also exist with plastic lampshades. You can find a chandelier over here on Vintageinfo.
Angelo Gaetano Sciolari
Angelo Sciolari graduated with a degree in architecture but wanted to be a filmmaker. This course came to an abrupt end when in 1949 his father suddenly died and he took over the Sciolari Lighting company at the age of 22.
His first designs in the 1950s were Sputnik inspired pendants; of course it was the space age.
In the 1960s he created refined, futuristic and sharp classical style chandeliers. Lines were clean and sculptural and materials such as crystal and ice glass sparkled with a voluptuously luxurious coolness and he started combining brass with chrome.
He led the family business with a passionate vision and within years, he expanded the business and started working with other light companies worldwide.
Gaetano Sciolari designed lamps for Stilnovo and Stilkronen (Italy), Lightolier and Progress Lighting (USA), S.A. Boulanger (Belgium), Helestra and Leola (Germany), Lyfa (Denmark) and some other companies and of course for his own Italian family business; the Sciolari company in Rome and Milan; where all the lighting business at that time was present.
Sciolari was the founder and the first president of the trade association of Italian manufacturers of lighting fixtures, the AIDI. The Associazione Italiana di Illuminazione was founded in 1958 and still exists today.
Links (external links open in a new window)
Other Sciolari lamps on Vintageinfo
Associazione Italiana di Illuminazione website (AIDI)
James Bond – Live and Let Die – IMDb
Dallas (1978 TV series) on Wikipedia
Layer Cake (2004) on Wikipedia
Vintageinfo:
Lamps in the movies!
A Sciolari Cubic chandelier was used as a prop in the James Bond film Live and Let Die from 1973. Similar chandeliers were also used in the TV-series Dallas and Space 1999 (aired from 1975 to 1977).