History Repeating
You can never have enough of a good thing, so they say. But lovers of iconic lamps from the early 20th century were for decades deprived of the possibility of owning some of the most striking luminary pieces by the Wiener Werkstätte and the Bauhaus, having long fallen out of production. This is the story of WOKA, the Vienna-based manufacturer that set out to bring a significant slice history back to life.
December 9, 2013 | 11:00 pm CUT

Coming around again: Vienna-based lighting manufacturer has made it its mission to reissue a raft of iconic early 20th-century designs. Shown here, Adolf Loos's 'Knize 55' pendant light


WOKA has acquired the production licences for over 200 lighting pieces by, among others, the celebrated Wiener Werkstätte and the Bauhaus. Seen here, Koloman Moser's 'Floege' from 1904 (top) and Josef Hoffmann's 1903 'Damensalon' wall lamp (above)



WOKA chief Wolfgang Karolinsky has brought together a collection of the talents in his Vienna workshop. Here, a small team of designers and craftspeople faithfully manufacture some of the most seminal lighting designs from the last century




Karolinsky deliberately keeps his team small in order to retain an overview of the company's operations and to guarantee that the hand-fabricated quality that comes with a WOKA product remains consistently high



The designers whose work WOKA is licensed to produce reads like a Who's Who of design history. Shown here, 'BIL1/50' pendant light by the Wiener Werkstätte (top), Josef Hoffman's 'JH1' wall light (middle) and the Bauhaus 'Office 1' floor lamp (above)


Iconic lighting from WOKA: 'CR1' chandelier by Josef Hoffmann (top) and Adolf Loos's 'Brioni' chandelier (above)



WOKA-produced lamps are particularly valued by architects and designers for their quality and aesthetics. Seen here, the Vienna State Opera (top) and the Purkersdorf Sanatorium in Vienna, designed by Josef Hoffmann (above)


High-end projects provide the perfect home for WOKA lighting products: Otto Wagner Vienna Stadtbahn architecture (top) and the Harry Winston salon at Harrods, London (above)

Woka CEO, Wolfgang Karolinsky: 'Our workshop is producing in the same way as the Wiener Werstätte did. We never wanted to be a big company, just a company that is able to deliver quality'
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