Space Age UFO Table Lamp in Blue Ceramic and Aluminum
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Ref: A-056
- Manufacturer
- Unknown
- Period
- 1974
- Origin
- France
- Materials
- Ceramic, Aluminum
- Color
- Blue
- Condition
- Good — original wiring, minor patina consistent with age
- Height
- 67 cm
- Width
- 45 cm
- Depth
- 45 cm
There is something quietly thrilling about a lamp that looks like it landed from another decade entirely. This 1974 Space Age UFO table lamp, with its vivid blue ceramic base and brushed aluminum upper disc, belongs to the era when designers looked upward for inspiration — toward space travel, satellite dishes, and the promise of a future that felt exhilaratingly close.
The construction is a study in contrasts. The lower saucer is glazed ceramic, cool to the touch, its blue finish deepened by more than fifty years of gentle aging. The upper disc is lightweight aluminum, slightly convex, creating a reflective canopy that bounces light downward in a warm, diffused pool. Together, the two halves form a convincing flying saucer silhouette that stands sixty-seven centimeters tall and forty-five wide — substantial enough to anchor a console or side table.
This particular example is in honest, original condition. The wiring is period-correct, the ceramic shows no chips or cracks, and the aluminum retains its original brushed finish with only the lightest surface patina. We have never encountered another example of this specific model, which suggests either a very limited production run or a small-studio piece.
The lamp is most likely of French origin, fitting neatly into the broader Space Age design movement that flourished across Europe in the late 1960s and 1970s. Think of it as a sibling to the work of Luigi Colani or the Djinn series by Olivier Mourgue — objects that treated the home as a launchpad for imagination. The anonymous designer remains unknown, which only adds to its mystique.
Placed on a low credenza or beside a reading chair, this lamp does exactly what the best vintage lighting should do: it starts a conversation before you even switch it on. The blue glow it casts through the ceramic base is atmospheric without being theatrical, turning any corner into something worth lingering in.