In the design world, the line between functional object and artwork has never been thinner, and nowhere is that more visible than in the current generation of handcrafted lighting coming out of Quebec.
A growing number of studios in the province are treating light fixtures not as commodities but as designed objects with the same intentionality, material depth, and visual presence as sculpture.
The object as authorial statement
Traditional lighting manufacture treated the fixture as background: something that should work well and blend in. The current Quebec movement inverts that logic. The fixture is foregrounded, sized, proportioned, and finished to demand attention in the way a ceramic vessel or a cast bronze piece would in a gallery context.
Luminaire Authentik, founded in 2015 in Cowansville in the Eastern Townships, has been one of the most visible practitioners of this approach. Their
pendant collections treat each shade as a variable rather than a fixed element, pairing different materials with the same structural form to produce pieces that read differently in each room they inhabit.
Natural stone as a design medium in light
The use of natural stone in pendant lighting is a good example of how the current Quebec movement works. Stone has always been present in interior design, but primarily as a surface material. Applying it to a suspended object introduces a completely different set of visual dynamics: the translucency of alabaster and certain onyxes, the way veining catches and redistributes light, the sheer visual weight of a stone shade hanging from a fine wire.
A pendant with a dark onyx shade reads as a heavy, jewel-like object during the day and as a luminous form at night. Studios exploring this territory have had to solve real engineering problems alongside the aesthetic ones: stone shades are heavy, must be precisely balanced, and need mounting hardware that can carry their weight without compromising the visual delicacy of the whole piece.
The residency model as a creative engine
One of the more interesting structural features of the Quebec lighting scene is the emergence of artist residency programs within manufacturing studios. Rather than keeping design strictly internal, some studios have begun inviting artists and designers for short-term residencies.
Luminaire Authentik's Art Residency Program gives participants access to the studio's materials, tools, and manufacturing capacity to develop work that may or may not result in a commercial product.
Customization as craft continuity
Another feature of the current Quebec movement is the emphasis on customization, not as a premium add-on but as a fundamental part of how the objects are designed and sold. Most studios offer customers the ability to specify shade material, finish, wire color, and proportions.
Studios like Luminaire Authentik have developed digital tools to support this, including a 3D configurator that lets buyers
visualize their full configuration before production begins. This reduces misalignment between expectation and reality while preserving the handcrafted nature of the final piece.
A regional scene with broader reach
The handcrafted lighting movement in Quebec is still relatively young, but it is accumulating the kind of cultural weight that tends to attract wider attention. Work from regional studios has appeared in commercial hospitality projects in New York and Mexico, and in design media that typically covers New York, Milan, and London as its primary reference points.