Masquespacio unveils spiky palm tree-like lamps at Dubai Design Week

Spanish design studio Masquespacio has created a trio of colourful clay lamps called Ceramic Blossom, combining 3D-printed and hand-moulded elements.

Presented as part of the Isola exhibition during Dubai Design Week, Ceramic Blossom is a mini collection of three conical floor lamps finished in baby pink, lilac and light green.

Ceramic Blossom is a trio of conical floor lamps by Masquespacio

Each lamp features hand-moulded “petals” – decorative protrusions that reminded Masquespacio of the spiky trunks of date palm trees that grow across the United Arab Emirates.

“Although we define the design as the blossom of a flower, the lamps also remind us of palm trees, which symbolise prosperity and resilience in the UAE,” studio co-founder Christophe Penasse told Dezeen.

Each lamp features hand-moulded “petals”

Penasse and Masquespacio co-founder Ana Milena Hernández Palacios used 3D-printing technology to create the clay body of each lamp, ranging from one to one-and-a-half metres in height.

Individually handcrafted protrusions were added to each lamp before the designs were fired, finished in a bespoke glaze and crowned with rounded LED bulbs.

Masquespacio created Ceramic Blossom to experiment with using clay at scale

“The lamps were retouched by hand to give them a more personal look,” said Penasse.

According to the designer, the studio created Ceramic Blossom to experiment with using clay at scale – a material often relegated to smaller objects like bowls or mugs.


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“It also gets us away from the solely digital lifestyle,” said Penasse, who explained that much of Masquespacio’s work demands computer-based technologies.

The collection forms part of Mas Creations, Masquespacio’s furniture and homeware brand. It was created at Penasse and Hernández Palacios’s self-designed home and studio, set within a renovated farmhouse on the outskirts of Valencia.

The collection forms part of Masquespacio’s Mas Creations

Masquespacio’s vibrant portfolio includes Bilbao student housing characterised by a colour-blocked interior and a striking burger joint in Turin, Italy, with a blue-tiled seating area designed to look like a swimming pool.

Dubai Design Week concluded last week and featured a parametric cardboard pavilion by British designer Ross Lovegrove.

The photography is courtesy of Masquespacio.

Dezeen is a media partner of Dubai Design Week 2024, which took place from 5 to 10 November. See Dezeen Events Guide for an up-to-date list of architecture and design events taking place around the world.

The post Masquespacio unveils spiky palm tree-like lamps at Dubai Design Week appeared first on Dezeen.

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