Flow Lamp
It explores the duality between absence and presence, transparency and mass.
Flow Lamp is a blown glass object conceived to exist in two states. During the day, it recedes into its surroundings, almost disappearing as light passes through its translucent body. Its presence is subtle, defined more by reflection and distortion than by form, allowing the object to dissolve into the space it inhabits.
When illuminated, the lamp transforms. The organic geometry of the blown glass becomes legible, asserting itself as a sculptural presence. Light activates the thickness, curves, and internal tensions of the material, revealing layers, gradients, and imperfections inherent to the glass-making process. What was nearly invisible becomes dense, atmospheric, and spatial.
Flow Lamp explores the duality between absence and presence, transparency and mass. It operates simultaneously as a source of light and as an object, blurring the boundary between functional design and sculpture. The piece invites a quiet awareness of time, material, and transformation—where light is not merely emitted, but sculpted.