Sherazade di Siba Sahabi | Prototipi

Fotografo: Lisa Klappe

Sherazade di Siba Sahabi | Prototipi ×
Sherazade di Siba Sahabi | Prototipi

Fotografo: Lisa Klappe

Sherazade di Siba Sahabi | Prototipi ×
Sherazade di Siba Sahabi | Prototipi

Fotografo: Lisa Klappe

Sherazade di Siba Sahabi | Prototipi ×

Inspired by nighttime silhouettes of Middle Eastern rooftops, this collection is comprised of three lamps made of coiled coloured felt strips coated with a layer of metallic paint on both sides, increasing the refection of the light.

Siba’s work is dedicated to 'Sherazade’, the most famous Persian female character and storyteller of One Thousand and One Nights (also known as The Arabian Nights). Sherazade, a wise queen, escapes the death penalty by telling stories to the sultan and giving birth to three sons during a period of 1001 nights.

This collection of West and South Asian stories dates back to the 9th century and was translated by the French writer Antoine Galland in 1717. Since then, it has had an immense influence on Western literature, visual arts, dance, music and film.

In the 18th and 19th century, the heroin Sherazade was eroticized and exoticized by the orientalists. At the time, Europe was characterized by bourgeois constraint and Victorian prudery and the Orient was a device for mental escapism.

Since the 20th century, Sherazade has been transcending her original literary environment, appearing in different novels and films and becoming a role model for discussing contemporary female issues such as self-determination and independence.



Though Persian in her origin, Sherazade’s changing European image reflects the transformation of the female role in Western society throughout the last three centuries.

Siba Sahabi

Sherazade di Siba Sahabi | Prototipi

Fotografo: Lisa Klappe

Sherazade di Siba Sahabi | Prototipi ×
Sherazade di Siba Sahabi | Prototipi

Fotografo: Lisa Klappe

Sherazade di Siba Sahabi | Prototipi ×
Sherazade di Siba Sahabi | Prototipi

Fotografo: Lisa Klappe

Sherazade di Siba Sahabi | Prototipi ×