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Bauhaus Ceiling Lamp | DMB 30
Architonic ID: 1014085
SKU: DMB 30
Year of Launch: 1926
Various lamps designed by Marianne Brandt are described, dimensioned and illustrated in detail in the 1928/29 catalogue published by Schwintzer & Gräff. These lighting fixtures were already being mass-produced back then. The precise catalogue details have allowed us to faithfully restore some of the lamps.
Ceiling lamp made of nickel-plated metal, opal and etched matt glass.
Each lamp is numbered consecutively and bears this symbol: TECNOLUMEN / BAUHAUS
Recommended illuminant: LED lamp 8 W, matt
lamp socket: E 27
net weight: 6,7
dimmable
no bulbs included
This product belongs to collection:


Germany
Marianne Brandt (née Liebe) (1893–1983) was a pioneering German designer and one of the most influential figures of the Bauhaus movement. Trained initially as a painter, she joined the Bauhaus in Weimar in 1924 and soon became a leading student in the metal workshop, an area dominated by men at the time. Under the mentorship of László Moholy-Nagy, Brandt's innovative designs in metalwork — particularly her teapots, lamps, and ashtrays — came to embody the functional and minimalist aesthetics of the Bauhaus. Her iconic teapot design, created in 1924, is celebrated for its geometric purity and remains a landmark of 20th-century industrial design. Brandt later became the head of the Bauhaus metal workshop, making her one of the first women to lead a workshop at the school. Beyond her Bauhaus contributions, Brandt worked as a designer for the metalware company Ruppelwerk and later engaged in teaching and visual arts. Her legacy lies in her commitment to combining functionality with elegant simplicity, which helped shape modern industrial design and challenged gender norms within the field.