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Lights Fantastic

January / February 2026

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Architectural Digest US

Lighting sculptor Stephen White constructed more than 2,000 works over his six-decade career, at least one a staggering 18 feet tall, yet his meticulous scrapbooks contain scant evidence of public recognition. A few newspaper clippings from Hawaii and the West Coast sit next to a single national magazine cover, nearly half a century old the logo obscuring White's (uncredited) design

Lights Fantastic

SOFT-SPOKEN AND GROUNDED, Stephen White has little interest in accolades. “The work was always appreciated by those who knew it,” he says with a shrug. “I never felt unrecognized.”

Now, at last, the design world’s attention has arrived, just in time for White’s retirement. The 86-year-old recently handed off his practice to his daughter, Simone White, a transition that coincided with what Simone calls “a dramatic increase in interest.”

In recent years, several AD100 designers have helped elevate White's profile by installing his fixtures in rooms worthy of his artistry. “I was struck immediately by the quiet poetry of Stephen’s work,” Pamela Shamshiri says of discovering White through LA’s Twentieth Gallery. “His pieces have a natural presence, almost like an animal.” Echoing that sentiment, Heidi Caillier says she was attracted to a certain “organic element that can be hard to achieve. They make a room feel special on their own.” And Elizabeth Roberts, who commissioned a light for the Ulla Johnson flagship in New York City, notes: “Stephen’s fixtures add softness and sensitivity to any space. They have soul, stemming from the love and care that goes into creating them.”

Each numbered fixture bears White’s identifying mark—a rising sun stamp he carved in the late 1960s using a flathead screwdriver and soapstone. The insignia seems especially apt for a designer who conceived his first collection in polar gloom.

In 1966, as a young Air Force engineering officer, White deployed to Alaska's Cape Lisburne station and spent two winters 160 miles above the Arctic Circle. The sun would set in mid-November and reemerge in late January. "It's not totally black, just a deep gray," White says.

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