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Vitra's Petite Potence Lamp is a practical lamp that is fixed to the wall and can swing through 180 degrees. The reach of the arm is extended beyond what would usually be possible thanks to a simple tensile wire.

The Petite Potence Wall lamp was designed as a pivoting lamp for Jean Prouvé's Nancy home in 1947. It was then developed into the 2-metre Potence Lamp for the flat-pack house concept 'Maison Tropique' in 1950. Although the concept of the house was not successful, many of the individual elements like this lamp have become regarded as modern masterpieces. The fascination of this luminaire stems from the spareness of its materials and forms.

Petite Potence is essentially a puristic one metre long arm, cantilevered with a strong wall bracket and supporting tensile wire. On the end is an E27 screw which can take any bulb with this fitting type (3 Watt dimmable LED bulb supplied). The optional Abat-Jour Conique is the first lampshade designed for Potence by Prové in 1947 and is intended for use with the Potence and Petite Potence lamps. It is simply fitted over the light bulb and can be removed again when needed. 

Jean Prouvé Petite Potence Lamp

Jean Prouvé Petite Potence Lamp

by Vitra

Regular price £919.00 GBP
Regular price Sale price £919.00 GBP
Sale
in stock and ready to ship
Made to Order for you in 6-8 weeks
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‘Made to Order’ products are ordered in from the manufacturer on the customers request and are considered a bespoke product - special terms and conditions apply. Production (lead) times stated above are an estimate only and do not include transit times from the supplier, or the time taken to deliver to you.

In stock items are available for immediate dispatch from our London-based warehouse. The daily cut-off time is 12:00 am for same day shipping, orders placed in the afternoon will be shipped the following day. Please refer to inventory levels above for live stock availability.

Technical Information

Dimensions:-
Without Shade - Length: 104 cm, Height: 30 cm, Width: 3.5 cm
Shade - Diameter: 35.5 cm, Height: 18.5 cm

Socket - E27
Light source - Porcelain II, LED Globe 80 mm (1 bulb included)
Dimmability - Dimmer
Kelvin - 2700K (warm white)
Cable length - from cable outlet to dimmer 95 cm, from dimmer to plug 300 cm
Max. watt - 12W
Energy efficiency - F

Supplied with UK plug fitted

Materials/Construction

Frame - Powder-coated tubular steel.
Abat-Jour Conique (shade) - brushed cotton in white with plastic backing.
Cord - Black textile cord with in-line dimmer.

Product Downloads

Vitra's Petite Potence Lamp is a practical lamp that is fixed to the wall and can swing through 180 degrees. The reach of the arm is extended beyond what would usually be possible thanks to a simple tensile wire.

The Petite Potence Wall lamp was designed as a pivoting lamp for Jean Prouvé's Nancy home in 1947. It was then developed into the 2-metre Potence Lamp for the flat-pack house concept 'Maison Tropique' in 1950. Although the concept of the house was not successful, many of the individual elements like this lamp have become regarded as modern masterpieces. The fascination of this luminaire stems from the spareness of its materials and forms.

Petite Potence is essentially a puristic one metre long arm, cantilevered with a strong wall bracket and supporting tensile wire. On the end is an E27 screw which can take any bulb with this fitting type (3 Watt dimmable LED bulb supplied). The optional Abat-Jour Conique is the first lampshade designed for Potence by Prové in 1947 and is intended for use with the Potence and Petite Potence lamps. It is simply fitted over the light bulb and can be removed again when needed. 

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    Customer Reviews

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    D
    Daniel Boyd-Barrett (Ojai, US)
    Great Lamp

    Beautiful lamp and seamless transaction and shipping.

    Jean Prouvé

    This product is designed by
    Jean Prouvé

    Jean Prouvé completed his training as a metal artisan before opening his own workshop in Nancy in 1924. In the following years he created numerous furniture designs, and in 1947 Prouvé established his own factory.

    He left his mark on architectural history again in 1971, when he played a major role in selecting the design of Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers for the Centre Pompidou as chairman of the competition jury. Prouvé's work encompasses a wide range of objects, from a letter opener to door and window fittings, lighting and furniture, façade elements and prefabricated houses / modular building systems to large exhibition structures – essentially, almost anything that is suited to industrial production methods.