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Founded in 1945 by Giuseppe Ostuni, Oluce is the oldest Italian publishing house still in business today.
For many years, Oluce, Arteluce and Azucena dominated the Italian design scene. In fact, as houses open to new designers, they committed themselves first to reconstruction, then to mass production, working in particular with : Vittoriano Vigano and BBPR, Gigi Caccia Dominioni and Ignazio Gardella, Marco Zanuso and Joe Colombo.
As early as 1951, Oluce scored a huge success at the IX Triennale, in the section headed by designers Achille, Livio and Pier Giacomo Castiglioni, with the Luminator designed by Franco Buzzi.
Following this period, Oluce enjoyed a period of significant growth and success, thanks for example to the visionary eye of Gio Ponti. What followed were awards and successes, thanks in particular to Domus magazine. Tito Agnoli contributed to the company's success in 1954, 1955 and 1956. Then it was the turn of the prodigious and dazzling Joe Colombo, with extraordinary creations such as the "Combi-Centre" and the "mini-Cuisine". The "Acrilica" only strengthened Joe Colombo's position as a major designer, and gave rise to the "Colombo" model, a translucent Perspex desk lamp forming a C, as well as the "Coupé", "Spider", "Snoopy" and "Lesbo" models.
Another renowned designer, Vico Magistretti, also contributed to Oluce's success. His magnificent creations include the Atollo lamp, the famous pencil lamp in the permanent collection of the MOMA in New York. The secret of this legendary lamp undoubtedly lies in the geometry of its forms: the cone on the cylinder, topped by the hemisphere. A luminous sculpture to which nothing can be added, and from which nothing can be taken away.
Thereafter, the house regularly changed style: with the rigor of Swiss designer Hannes Wettstein (in the 1990s), or Toni Cordero and his use of unconventional forms (in the 2000s), or Harri Koskinen, a young Finnish designer and his Nordic style, or finally Japanese designer Oki Sato.
Today, it's no longer about the history of Oluce, but rather about its contribution to contemporary design...
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