‘hyperion’ spotlight by paul heijnen

 

 

 

 

‘hyperion’ is a lamp prototype developed as part of a series of different scaled spotlights which emphasize the beauty of mechanical components and their inner workings–breaking the conventions of how a product should look or function. with this three-legged anthropod-like lighting object, paul heijnen tries to celebrate its robotic features, allowing one to manipulate it so that it can either kneel down on the ground or stand erect.

 

the design, which takes its name from the titan of good light, is made from CNC cut oakwood profi deck (a wood-plastic composite) and hand assembled. displayed at the museo bagatti valsecchi in milan until april 30th in the rossanna orlandi curated exhibition–which also includes new works by nacho carbonell (see designboom’s feature on the spanish designer’s pieces presented during milan design week 2013 here)–a full-scale 6m steel version of the spotlight is projected for completion within the year.

 

 

hyperion spotlight by paul heijnenthe anthropod-like creature celebrates the mechanics of a product

 

 

hyperion spotlight by paul heijnenalternative views of the spotlight

 

 

hyperion spotlight by paul heijnendetail of the CNC-cut oakwood profi deck

 

 

‘hyperion’ in actionvideo courtesy of niels hoebers

 

 

hyperion spotlight by paul heijnen‘hyperion’ within the context of museo bagatti valsecchiimages © designboom

 

 

hyperion spotlight by paul heijnenview of the spotlightimage © designboom

 

 

hyperion spotlight by paul heijnensmall scale model of ‘hyperion’image © designboom

 

 designboom has received this project from our ‘DIY submissions‘ feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.