The Split Stack Lamp is a very interesting lamp design by Roger Born . To understand the evolution of the Split Stack Lamp, it is best to look first at two earlier bodies of work- the open series, and the flat stacks ( all Roger Born lamp works can be seen here ). The open series marked the first step in pushing neon away from a history of flatness, and shifting it into three-dimensions. These lamps traced the edges of three-dimensional shapes, but had no real solid form beyond the contours of their sides. They had open interiors, and only their edges were delineated. The flat stacks moved further towards addressing a solid three-dimensional shape. By placing individual hand bent neon components atop each other, a larger form emerged, growing from the individual layers. Their contours were determined by the edges and perimeter of each individual cross section. Taken together, the aggregate shape of these layers established the profile of the object as a whole. In relation, the split stack lamp in particular, and the radial stacks in general, are a synthesis of these two antecedents. At its center resides a dense central core of six vertical tubes which towards the bottom, stretch outward and

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Pushing Neon Away from a History of Flatness : Split Stack Lamp