Drifting Lights in motion

Preciosa transforms glass and light into an immersive, emotional installation at Milan Design Week 2026

Drifting Lights by Preciosa Lighting, Milan Design Week 2026 - Photo © Jan Dolezal
Drifting Lights by Preciosa Lighting, Milan Design Week 2026 - Photo © Jan Dolezal

At Milan Design Week 2026, Preciosa Lighting returns to Brera with Drifting Lights, an installation that shifts the role of lighting from object to experience. Presented at Tempesta Art Gallery, the project unfolds as both a product showcase and a spatial narrative, where light is not fixed but constantly moving, dissolving, and reforming.

Known for translating centuries of Bohemian glassmaking into contemporary design, Preciosa pushes its material language further here. Sixty suspended glass panels occupy the gallery, arranged vertically and horizontally to form a structure that feels architectural yet weightless. Within this composition, light travels fluidly, passing from one panel to another, changing tone and intensity as it moves.

The effect is intentionally reminiscent of ink dispersing in water. Colours bloom, fade, and recombine, revealing the inner life of the material itself. Each panel is infused with delicate air bubbles that catch the light, turning what would otherwise be static surfaces into constellations in motion.

Rather than overwhelming the viewer, the installation is designed to slow them down. As visitors move through the space, sequences of colour shift gradually from red to pink to green, forming an emotional spectrum that moves between intensity and calm. The experience becomes less about spectacle and more about perception, encouraging a quiet awareness of change, rhythm, and atmosphere.

Designed by Co-Creative Directors Michael Vasku and Andreas Klug, Drifting Lights reflects a broader intention to create moments of pause within the density of Milan Design Week. The installation responds to the energy of the city while offering a counterpoint, a space where light choreographs a softer, more introspective experience.

Technically, the system remains precise. Each glass element slots into a stainless-steel frame that conceals LED strips, while advanced RGBW technology and 3D spatial mapping allow designers to orchestrate light as if it were a living medium. Yet the technology never dominates. Instead, it dissolves into the experience, allowing material, colour, and movement to take precedence.

As part of Preciosa’s Signature Designs programme, the installation is also fully adaptable. Variations in size, orientation, and surface treatment allow it to shift across contexts, from gallery environments to private interiors. But in Milan, it exists in its most expressive form: a temporary landscape where light drifts, gathers, and disappears.

In Drifting Lights, Preciosa proposes a subtle but powerful idea. Lighting is no longer just about illumination. It becomes something felt, something that unfolds over time, shaping not only space, but emotion itself.