this chandelier behaves like a living machine inspired by 1950s computers
LUMIAC by andrea mancuso is a kinetic structure with moving aluminum arms and glowing glass spheres. The post this chandelier behaves like a living machine inspired by 1950s computers appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
this chandelier behaves like a living machine inspired by 1950s computers
LUMIAC by andrea mancuso is a kinetic structure with moving aluminum arms and glowing glass spheres. The post this chandelier behaves like a living machine inspired by 1950s computers appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
LUMIAC by andrea mancuso is a kinetic structure with moving aluminum arms and glowing glass spheres. The post this chandelier behaves like a living machine inspired by 1950s computers appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
andrea mancuso’s chandelier draws from early computers
Andrea Mancuso’s LUMIAC is a kinetic chandelier that behaves like an active presence, generating continuous movement, reflection, and illumination. Installed within Nilufar’s historic venue on Via della Spiga during Milan Design Week 2026, the chandelier moves its robotic claws as if it’s alive.
Designed as a kinetic ceiling lamp, LUMIAC explores the relationship between organic gesture and artificial thought. Its name, an acronym for Light Unit Mechanized Intelligence Apparatus Computer, deliberately references MANIAC, one of the earliest autonomous computers developed during the 1950s. Through this connection, Mancuso positions the project within the origins of computational thinking.

all images by Filippo Pincolini, unless stated otherwise
lumiac is imagined as a mechanical organism
A cast aluminum structure extends outward through articulated arms that resemble bones branching from a spine, giving the object an almost anatomical appearance. At the end of each arm, blown glass spheres emit a soft glow, while motors embedded within the central core animate the structure through synchronized movement. A remote-control system coordinates dimming and motion simultaneously, allowing the light to behave as part of the choreography.
Instead of remaining static overhead, LUMIAC shifts, reacts, and transforms spatial perception through movement, turning illumination into behavior and technology into something unexpectedly expressive. For the designer and his research-based studio, the project reflects a broader design philosophy centered on the dialogue between past and future. ‘Design, for me, is a journey that bridges imagination and reality, where each project becomes a dialogue between the material and the immaterial, the historical and the contemporary,’ Andrea Mancuso shares.

LUMIAC transforms the chandelier into a kinetic organism

inspired by early computational systems

installed at Nilufar during Milan Design Week 2026 | image by Alejandro Ramirrez Orozco

the chandelier moves through synchronized light and motion | image by Alejandro Ramirrez Orozco

articulated aluminum arms extend outward like mechanical limbs

animating the structure through choreographed movement

the chandelier’s anatomical structure recalls bones branching outward from a spine

a remote-control device synchronizes the chandelier’s movement and dimming system

a kinetic chandelier designed as a living machine | image by Alejandro Ramirrez Orozco
project info:
name: LUMIAC Collection
designer: Andrea Mancuso | @andreamancuso_studio
The post this chandelier behaves like a living machine inspired by 1950s computers appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
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