Gräshoppa Table Lamp, Fabric Shade

Design by Greta M. Grossman

GUBI’s new addition to the Gräshoppa Collection by Greta M. Grossman reimagines the designer and architect’s table lamp design with an elongated shade in natural canvas. Inspired by archival images of an early prototype, the new edition brings a fresh material expression to the beloved lighting family – while maintaining its distinctive angled stem and round base in polished brass. Shaped to bring balance to the curves and lines of the design, the elongated lampshade extends and diffuses the lamp’s field of light, and can be adjusted to meet the needs of the mood and the moment, making it an ideal reading light. With its gentle ambient glow, the lamp introduces warmth and nuance into the room, complementing any interior and sitting comfortably alongside the steel-shade edition.

€ 499incl. VAT
Made to orderFree shippingDelivery in 1-3 months

GUBI’s new addition to the Gräshoppa Collection by Greta M. Grossman reimagines the designer and architect’s table lamp design with an elongated shade in natural canvas. Inspired by archival images of an early prototype, the new edition brings a fresh material expression to the beloved lighting family – while maintaining its distinctive angled stem and round base in polished brass. Shaped to bring balance to the curves and lines of the design, the elongated lampshade extends and diffuses the lamp’s field of light, and can be adjusted to meet the needs of the mood and the moment, making it an ideal reading light. With its gentle ambient glow, the lamp introduces warmth and nuance into the room, complementing any interior and sitting comfortably alongside the steel-shade edition.

Greta M. Grossman

Greta M. Grossman (1906-1999) was an innovator in the male-dominated worlds of mid-century industrial and interior design and architecture, gaining international recognition for her work. She was born and educated in Sweden, setting up Studio - her first combined store and workshop - in Stockholm the same year she married musician Billy Grossman. With the onset of the Second World War, the pair emigrated to California where she worked as an architect. She was among the first to bring the Scandinavian modern aesthetic to southern California's burgeoning modernist scene.