OLighting stands behind the quality of all the products we sell. Your satisfaction with the products you purchase and with the overall experience of dealing with us is of the utmost priority to us. If you are not 100% satisfied, you may return your item for a full refund within 30 days. See our Return Policy for complete details.
Enjoy the comfort of knowing you have 30 Days to return any unused, uninstalled item as long as it is in its original packaging in resalable condition. Oh, and we’ll pay the shipping both ways. See the O.Trade Return Policy for full details.
Fontana Arte Corrubedo Wall Lamp
The geometric lines of the Fontana Arte Corrubedo Wall Lamp offers diffused light emissions upwards or downwards. The unique design of the Corrubedo Wall Lamp will delight all who see it. Fontana Arte has given us another exciting choice for designer lighting, the Corrubedo Wall Lamp.
Finish: Polished White Painted Metal & Satin Glass
Width: 7.8in" x Height: 7.8in"
120 Volts
Halogen: (1)40 Watts, or Fluorescent: (1)18 Watts
UL Listed
Architect Gio Ponti founded FontanaArte in 1932 as an artistic division in the company Luigi Fontana, historically, the company leader in advanced glass manufacturing and design.
The design company's works were first distinguished by its realization of artistic stained-glass windows, many of which are today still functional elements and ornamental in churches and cathedrals, amongst them the Duomo of Milan and the cathedral of Brasilia. By using glass, architect Ponti realized what an enormous potential this material could offer in the making of furnishing complements for interiors. Urged by this intuition he started to design and produce furniture, lamps and objects with glass and the main distinguishing feature, in a short time a new collection was ready to be marketed, and his new concept was being used as a complement to the interior decoration of many houses that he personally designed.
FontanaArte's fame, linked to glass and design, continues to grow thanks to the interpretations of Gio Ponti and the insightful collaboration of Pietro Chiesa.
The company's growth in those years was remarkable, up until an important international group buys FontanaArte by the means of the Luigi Fontana's acquisition.
The very rigid industrial culture of the group, so much tied up to the idea of producing "big numbers" had the business managers adopt the wrong strategic choices, damaging the marriage between glass and design.