This Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as Primary

Floor lamps typically exist in your peripheral vision. They illuminate a corner, frame a reading chair, or cast ambient light from behind the couch, and beyond choosing between brass or matte black, their design language is predictable. You get a pole, a shade, maybe a tripod base if the designer is feeling mid-century. Lacuna flips that entire playbook by treating the lamp as a sculptural centerpiece first and a lighting instrument second.

Designed by Kenji Abe, this large-scale floor lamp takes its name from the Latin word for cavity or void, drawing direct inspiration from the porous structures found in skeletons, honeycombs, coral reefs, and foraminifera. The result is a lighting object that feels simultaneously organic and architectural, as if someone carved a lamp out of petrified bone.

Designer: Kenji Abe

This Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as Primary

The hexagonal lattice structure that defines Lacuna is where the design earns its sculptural credibility. Most floor lamps hide their light source behind fabric or frosted glass, treating the shade as a functional diffuser. Lacuna does the opposite. The perforated shell becomes the entire visual identity, a rust-toned exoskeleton that exposes the warm glow radiating from within. Light escapes through the voids in the structure, casting intricate shadows across surrounding surfaces and creating a layered interplay between solid and negative space. The design feels intentionally unfinished, weathered in a way that bridges natural erosion and deliberate craft. That rust-like coating gives the lamp a presence that reads more like an artifact than a consumer product, something that could belong in a contemporary art gallery as easily as a living room.

This Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as Primary

This Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as Primary

Abe’s material choice reinforces the organic narrative. The structure appears to be manufactured through some form of additive process, given the continuous, flowing geometry and the lack of visible seams or fasteners. The surface texture has a granular, almost sintered quality that enhances the weathered aesthetic. This is a lamp that wants you to notice it when it is off, which is a rare ambition in lighting design. The scale pushes it into statement-piece territory. This is a floor lamp with genuine heft and visual mass, portable enough to relocate but substantial enough to anchor a space.

This Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as Primary

The warm internal light source, visible through the hexagonal voids, provides ambient illumination rather than focused task lighting. You are not reading by this lamp. You are setting a mood with it, using the interplay of light and shadow to transform how a room feels at night. The honeycomb geometry creates a diffuse glow that softens as it filters through the lattice, avoiding the harsh directional quality of exposed bulbs while maintaining enough warmth to feel inviting. Lacuna proves that floor lamps can be sculptural without sacrificing their functional purpose, turning an often-overlooked category into an opportunity for genuine artistic expression.

This Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as Primary

The post This Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as Primary first appeared on Yanko Design.

©

Related Posts

This Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as PrimaryThis Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as Primary
Zovio Headquarters – Chandler
McCarthy Nordburg realized the office design for the Zovio headquarters,...
Read more
This Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as PrimaryThis Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as Primary
The retail centre designed to bring Chongqing’s...
CapitaMall Skyview is a 100,000-square-metre community shopping centre located in...
Read more
potted succulents on rolling cart. / sfgirlbybaypotted succulents on rolling cart. / sfgirlbybay
color story: au naturale.
this week’s color story is all about the naturals —...
Read more
This Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as PrimaryThis Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as Primary
This Furniture Trick Makes Flat Wood Look...
Have you ever wondered why ergonomic furniture costs so much?...
Read more
This Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as PrimaryThis Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as Primary
How Three Stacked Shipping Containers Create a...
Sonic Steel’s Mark T sits tucked away in Port Neil,...
Read more
This Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as PrimaryThis Sculptural Lamp Treats Light as Secondary and its Decorative Shell as Primary
Literate design: The bookstore infused with Chinese...
Not simply a place to purchase reading material, The Glade...
Read more