Bernard Schottlander was born in Mainz, Germany in 1924, but moved to England in 1939. After serving with the British Army in India, he learned various welding techniques and then attended the Leeds College of Art followed by the Anglo-French Art Centre in St. John's Wood on a scholarship.
See the beautiful Mantis lamps by Bernard Schottlander below.
Bernard Schottlander described himself as a designer when it came to the indoors, but a sculptor when it came to the outdoors. After several successful years as an industrial designer, Bernard Schottlander decided to concentrate on sculptures. In the late 1950s, he established a workshop in North London, where he had George Nash as his skilled assistant for many years. From 1965 he taught metalwork at St. Martin's School of Art. That was the same year he was part of the Six Artists group at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London, and in 1966 he had his first solo exhibition at the Hamilton Galleries, also in London.
Bernard Schottlander admired Alexander Calder and from this inspiration created the Mantis lamp series in 1951. Movement is woven deeply into everything Schottlander created. He was an artist, an engineer and not least a handyman. He devised a clever system of counterweights that were combined with a series of strong and flexible metal bars. The screens were also unique, hanging elegantly and effortlessly like an acrobat. The screens are made in aluminum using so-called "spinning and chasing techniques" that are firmly rooted in the metalworker's collection of skills. To this solid craftsmanship, Bernard Schottlander added his skills as a sculptor and created a spiral movement where symmetry and asymmetry are in play.
Like the mobiles made by Alexander Calder, Mantis lamps appear to defy gravity. The core poetry of the objects is an invitation to enter a dream world of deliberately balanced elegance. The Mantis series from Bernard Schottlander is owned by DCWéditions.