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Le Soleil Suspension Lamp

Design: Vincente Garcia Jimenez

Suspended architecture that recalls the outline of the Guggenheim Museum in New York: this is the first impression of Le Soleil suspension lamp, a luminous sphere made up of irregular bands that act like reflective surfaces inside and like a diffuser outside, creating a soft, attractive hanging glow.

The use of a material that does not reveal the light, helps to create the special luminous effect of this lamp, with beams of light projected upwards and direct illumination downwards, to highlight a precise area of the space. The irregular edge of the bands adds movement to the volume of Le Soleil, with an architectural effect that renders it different every time, according to the observer’s point of view. The choice between different colours emphasizes its expressive nature and warm, friendly and playful style.

  • Dimensions


    Ø 62 x H 43 cm
    Base - 16 cm
    Drop - up to 320 cm

    Material & Finishes


    Injection moulded polycarbonate and coated metal.

    Bulb Requirements


    Max 3 x 70W E27 + 1×75W GU10 PAR 16 Light Bulbs not included

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Foscarini

Foscarini is a designer lamp company founded in Murano (Venice) in 1981. The brand's bond with its home territory is evident in its name paying homage to the patrician Venetian family. Foscarini first produced glass fixtures for the contract sector, which were soon joined by the decorative lamps that became the company's core business. In 1988, Carlo Urbinati and Alessandro Vecchiato took over the brand and began calling upon Italian and international designers. The first results were the Wassily on the wall applique, designed by Adam Tihany and Joseph Mancin in 1986 and the Lumiere table lamp, designed in 1990 by Rodolfo Dordoni. These products were followed by Orbital by Ferruccio Laviani and Havana by Joseph Forakis, a polyethene lamp that marked Foscarini's exploration of new materials and its move to Marcon on the mainland of the Veneto province. Foscarini's best-known lamps include Caboche by Patricia Urquiola and Eliana Gerotto; Twiggy and Tress by Marc Sadler; Gregg by Ludovica and Roberto Palomba; and Le Soleil by Vicente Garcia Jimenez. In more than thirty-five years of existence, Foscarini has received two Compasso d'Oro awards - in 2001 for the lamps Mite and Tite by Marc Sadler and in 2014 for the magazine "Inventario - Tutto è progetto". Today Foscarini has 2800 multi-brand shops in over eighty-eight countries and two flagship showrooms, Foscarini Spazio Soho in New York and Foscarini Spazio Monforte in Milan. In May 2022, Foscarini acquired 90 per cent of the German company Ingo Maurer GmbH.

The Foscarini collection consists of over sixty families of lamps, made of more than twenty materials and designed by over thirty designers. These include, in addition to Rodolfo Dordoni, Andrea Anastasio, creator of the Filo, Madre and Gioia lamps; Atelier Oï, responsible for Allegro and Allegretto; Defne Koz with Circus; Eugeni Quitllet, who designed Satellight; Ferruccio Laviani, designer of Dolmen, Orbital, Tuareg and Tobia; Giulio Iacchetti with Magneto; Ionna Vautrin with Couchin; Jean-Marie Massaud with Solar; Luca Nichetto, with Plass and Kurage; LucidiPevere with Aplomb and Arumi; Ludovica + Roberto Palomba, with Gem, Gregg, Rituals, Birdie and Soffio; Marc Sadler with Mite, Tress and Twiggy; Patricia Urquiola with Caboche; Tom Dixon with Lightweight; Werner Aisslinger with Behive. A team of critics flank the designers for Foscarini's publishing projects. 2010 saw the launch of "Inventario - Tutto è progetto", conceived and coordinated by Beppe Finessi and published by Corraini, followed in 2017 by the volume "Fare Luce" - a collection of articles addressing the topic of light in architecture, design, art and the humanities. The Maestrie project consists of a book, an installation and a series of short films.