The Top Industrial Bauhaus Design Made By The Simple Wilhelm Wagenfeld
When it comes to the applied art of industrial design, most likely no other name ,shouts louder than that of Wagenfeld . Regarded to be the most successful prodigy of the Staatliches Bauhaus, the German industrial stylist Wilhelm Wagenfeld made some of the most famed regard as designs of the 20th century. Yet none of his creations would tell to be as ageless as the Wagenfeld Lampe. Commonly known as the “Bauhaus lamp”, theWagenfeld Lampe represents the modernist impressions which the Bauhaus stands for and lingers an admired industrial design to this day.
Made up of a disc-shaped support, a tube-shaped stand and a semi-spherical glass lampshade, the Wagenfeld Lampe was created by Wagenfeld in cooperation with Karl J. Jucker in 1924 during their journeyman years at the Bauhaus. As the tale goes, the lamp’s design was completed by Wagenfeld as the solution to an assignment given to him by his teacher, the Bauhaus administrator Lazlo-Moholy Nagy.
Two types of the Wagenfeld Lamp currently exist. In the first type, the base and stand are completed from industrial grade steel coated with nickel. Reproductions of the Lampe were also done with chrome-plated steel, though nickel-plated lamps are more required after and can certainly be recognized by the yellowish glaze of the nickel gives off over time. But the second type, the stand and base are completed from thick clear glass. The internal core of the glass stand also has a nickel-plated tube which the electrical feed line is put up. The glass kind of Wagenfeld Lampe is generally more costly that its steel counterpart, as it is more hard to produce.
At present, the Technolumen company of Bremen, Germany is the authorized manufacturer of Wagenfeld Lampe reproductions. Technolumen obtained the privileges to make the Lampe from Wagenfeld in the early 1980s, and it now remains as one of its top products. However, reproductions of Wagenfeld’s design by other manufacturers have also appeared on the market.

