-
FINE ART
-
FURNITURE & LIGHTING
-
NEW + CUSTOM
-
DECORATIVE ARTS
- JEWELRY
-
INTERIORS
- FEATURED PROJECTS
- East Shore, Seattle by Kylee Shintaffer Design
- Apartment in Claudio Coello, Madrid by L.A. Studio Interiorismo
- The Apthorp by 2Michaels
- Houston Mid-Century by Jamie Bush + Co.
- Sag Harbor by David Scott
- Park Avenue Aerie by William McIntosh Design
- Sculptural Modern by Kendell Wilkinson Design
- Noho Loft by Frampton Co
- Greenwich, CT by Mark Cunningham Inc
- West End Avenue by Mendelson Group
- VIEW ALL INTERIOR DESIGNERS
- INTERIOR DESIGN BOOKS YOU NEED TO KNOW
- Distinctly American: Houses and Interiors by Hendricks Churchill and A Mood, A Thought, A Feeling: Interiors by Young Huh
- Robert Stilin: New Work, The Refined Home: Sheldon Harte and Inside Palm Springs
- Torrey: Private Spaces: Great American Design and Marshall Watson’s Defining Elegance
- Ashe Leandro: Architecture + Interiors, David Kleinberg: Interiors, and The Living Room from The Design Leadership Network
- Cullman & Kravis: Interiors, Nicole Hollis: Artistry of Home, and Michael S. Smith, Classic by Design
- New books by Alyssa Kapito, Rees Roberts + Partners, Gil Schafer, and Bunny Williams: Life in the Garden
- Peter Pennoyer Architects: City | Country and Jed Johnson: Opulent Restraint
- An Adventurous Life: Global Interiors by Tom Stringer
- VIEW ALL INTERIOR DESIGN BOOKS
-
MAGAZINE
- FEATURED ARTICLES
- Northern Lights: Lighting the Scandinavian Way
- Milo Baughman: The Father of California Modern
- A Chandelier of Rare Provenance
- The Evergreen Allure of Gustavian Style
- Every Picture Tells a Story: Fine Art Photography
- Vive La France: Mid-Century French Design
- The Timeless Elegance of Barovier & Toso
- Paavo Tynell: The Art of Radical Simplicity
- The Magic of Mid-Century American Design
- Max Ingrand: The Power of Light and Control
- The Maverick Genius of Philip & Kelvin LaVerne
- 10 Pioneers of Modern Scandinavian Design
- The Untamed Genius of Paul Evans
- Pablo Picasso’s Enduring Legacy
- Karl Springer: Maximalist Minimalism
- All Articles
Period
Medium
Location
- Clear All
Fornasier
Italian
Fabio Fornasier was born in Venice, Italy on the 16th of August 1963. He learned glassmaking in his father Luigi’s glassworks where he demonstrated his talent for design and an innate ability to transform glass into awe-inspiring art chandeliers. He became a Master Glassmaker at a very young age, opened his own glassworks on the Venetian island of Murano and started creating refined antique and modern chandeliers that immediately stood out for their innovative design.
Inquisitive by nature and drawn to different inspirations, he taught at many glass and design schools, such as the Royal College of Art in London, the Gerrit Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam, the Pilchuck Glass School in Washington DC, the Abate Zanetti Glass School on Murano, and others in France and Denmark. An exacting aesthete and multi-faceted artist, he took the traditional Venetian artisan techniques, with which he had become intimately familiar, and pushed them to the limit, ultimately experimenting with audacious, innovative shapes. Awards and praise flooded in from early on in his career.
Fabio’s relationship with contemporary art lies behind the creative work that has led to LU Murano: experimenting with creative processes in different fields is an integral part of his background and the continuous evolution of his work. Fornasier has personally taken part in art exhibitions, performances and workshops, either as an artist or performer, alongside the most interesting names on the contemporary art scene, as part of international art and design exhibitions such as the Venice Biennale, Aperto Vetro, Vitraria, the Cheongju Biennale in Korea, Milan Design Week, and in galleries in Italy, Europe, North America and Asia.
The LU Murano chandelier came about in 2004 and marked both a culmination and starting point of the brand’s new path. It was exhibited for the first time at the international show by Rosa Barovier Mentasti organized by the IVSLA Veneto arts and sciences institute and held in Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti, a Venetian palace on the banks of the Grand Canal. Entirely hand blown, lit with oil and completely transparent so as not to impede the view of the altar frescoes, the chandelier is unique and revolutionary in concept yet, at the same time, stands as testimony to the age-old Venetian glass tradition: craftsmanship of the highest level meets contemporary art. Multiplied over the years into countless colours and shapes, LU Murano is Fabio Fornasier’s alter-ego: in motion, evolving, unique.
Fornasier chandeliers
Inquisitive by nature and drawn to different inspirations, he taught at many glass and design schools, such as the Royal College of Art in London, the Gerrit Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam, the Pilchuck Glass School in Washington DC, the Abate Zanetti Glass School on Murano, and others in France and Denmark. An exacting aesthete and multi-faceted artist, he took the traditional Venetian artisan techniques, with which he had become intimately familiar, and pushed them to the limit, ultimately experimenting with audacious, innovative shapes. Awards and praise flooded in from early on in his career.
Fabio’s relationship with contemporary art lies behind the creative work that has led to LU Murano: experimenting with creative processes in different fields is an integral part of his background and the continuous evolution of his work. Fornasier has personally taken part in art exhibitions, performances and workshops, either as an artist or performer, alongside the most interesting names on the contemporary art scene, as part of international art and design exhibitions such as the Venice Biennale, Aperto Vetro, Vitraria, the Cheongju Biennale in Korea, Milan Design Week, and in galleries in Italy, Europe, North America and Asia.
The LU Murano chandelier came about in 2004 and marked both a culmination and starting point of the brand’s new path. It was exhibited for the first time at the international show by Rosa Barovier Mentasti organized by the IVSLA Veneto arts and sciences institute and held in Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti, a Venetian palace on the banks of the Grand Canal. Entirely hand blown, lit with oil and completely transparent so as not to impede the view of the altar frescoes, the chandelier is unique and revolutionary in concept yet, at the same time, stands as testimony to the age-old Venetian glass tradition: craftsmanship of the highest level meets contemporary art. Multiplied over the years into countless colours and shapes, LU Murano is Fabio Fornasier’s alter-ego: in motion, evolving, unique.
Fornasier chandeliers
Loading...