Description
Lean a slender sheet of anodized aluminum against the wall and the whole room seems to exhale. That’s Dolmen—Ferruccio Laviani’s nineties statement piece, revisited with hidden LED strips that send a warm tide of light through four round “portholes” and up the wall behind. You notice the heft first: a single plate, laser-cut, pressure-bent, and lacquered in raw aluminum, bronze, or the original volcanic orange. Yet when it’s lit, the lamp feels almost weightless; the opaline diffusers soften the LEDs until the circles glow like moons caught in metal.
Nothing needs bolting except a discreet clip that keeps the panel from slipping. A clear cord with slide dimmer trails away so quietly you’ll forget it’s there. Park Dolmen behind a sofa to graze texture up a brick wall, let it stand sentinel at the end of a hallway, or angle it beside a desk for a wash of indirect light that never glares. Daylight shows it as sculpture; nightfall turns it into a silent lantern—modern, monolithic, and impossible to ignore.



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