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More About This Collection

Premium Lighting and Designer Wall Art for Modern Interiors

Lighting and art are the two design decisions that transform a furnished room into a designed one. The Living Influence Lights & Art collection brings together premium pieces across original artworks and designer lighting fixtures such as spanning pendant lamps, wall sconces, table lamps, floor lamps, chandeliers, and wall art across every style, material, and room application. All curated as India's most comprehensive single-collection edit of designer lighting and original art.

Why Lighting and Art Belong Together

In the vocabulary of interior design, lighting and art share a unique relationship: they are the only two categories of home objects that operate simultaneously at the architectural scale (shaping the perception of an entire room) and at the intimate scale (rewarding close attention from a single viewer). A pendant lamp at ceiling level defines the room's spatial register like its material, form, and light quality determine how colour reads, how surfaces appear, and how human scale is perceived in the space. A work of art on the wall defines the room's cultural and emotional register, its composition, subject, and material surface carry a narrative that no furniture or decor object can replicate. When the lighting quality is right a work of art is revealed at its full depth. When the art is right, the room has a reason to be. The TLI Lights & Art collection is curated on the premise that these two categories are inseparable in a fully considered interior, and that the most powerful interiors are built by addressing both simultaneously.

The Lighting Collection — Designer Fixtures

Premium Pendant Lamps

Pendant lamps are the most architecturally expressive lighting format, they operate at ceiling level, define the room's primary visual axis, and function as sculptural objects independent of the light they produce. The TLI pendant range spans natural materials (rattan, bamboo, banana fibre, linen), metals (brass, brushed steel, powder-coated iron), and geometric and organic forms across every room application.

Key pendant pieces from the collection:

  • Raya Pendant Lamp — A statement pendant lamp at a premium specification level. The Raya delivers architectural ceiling presence suited to double-height living rooms, hotel lobbies, and statement dining room installations.
  • Theo Pendant Lamp — A designer pendant at the upper mid-range, a resolved form in a premium material suited to living rooms and dining rooms seeking a ceiling statement without the visual weight of a chandelier.
  • Sama Pendant Lamp — A pendant lamp available in multiple configurations like scalable for single or cluster installation. The Sama's flexibility makes it one of the most specification-versatile pieces in the TLI pendant range.
  • Velino Pendant Lamp — A mid-range pendant with a resolved material and form suited to dining room and kitchen island applications.
  • Rote Pendant Lamp — A compact pendant suited to bedroom, study room, and corridor applications where a smaller ceiling footprint is preferred.
  • Char Pendant Lamp — A pendant in a charcoal-toned or dark material finish — one of the collection's most minimal and architectural forms.
  • Stil Pendant Lamp — A minimal pendant (Stil: German for style/stillness) — a quietly resolved form suited to Scandinavian, Japandi, and minimal interior schemes.
  • Felice Pendant Lamp — At the accessible end of the pendant range (Felice: Italian for happy/fortunate), a well-resolved form at an entry-level pendant price point.
  • Fonte Pendant Lamp — A companion form to the Felice (Fonte: Italian for spring/source) suited to paired installation above a dining table or in a cluster composition.
  • Fred Pendant Lamp — A mid-range pendant in the Scandinavian/minimal aesthetic, the Fred (from the Old Germanic friðu: peace) name signals the calm, unhurried quality of the form.
  • Fresco Pendant — A pendant referencing the fresco (Italian: fresh) tradition, a form with a light, surface-quality finish suited to contemporary and Mediterranean-influenced interiors.
  • Kemps Pendant — A pendant with material presence suited to industrial and loft-style interiors.
  • Marin Pendant — A pendant or wall lamp in a coastal/maritime aesthetic (Marin: of the sea), suited to bathrooms, entryways, and coastal or Boho interior schemes.
  • Lain Pendant — A companion form in the Kemps/Marin mid-range pendant family.

For the complete pendant range, explore the full pendant lights collection.

Designer Wall Sconces

Wall sconces are the lighting format that most directly elevates a room from adequately lit to atmospherically designed. Unlike overhead lighting, which floods a room uniformly, a wall sconce delivers directional, layered light creating pools of warm illumination on walls and adjacent surfaces that introduce depth and visual complexity unavailable from ceiling sources alone.

The TLI wall sconce range includes pieces in brass finishes (aged brass, brushed brass, burnt brass, raw brass). The most materially rich and design-historically significant finish category in decorative lighting. Brass as a lamp material carries associations with the Arts and Crafts movement, Art Deco metalwork, and contemporary luxury hospitality lighting, it ages naturally through a patination process (the surface develops a warm, irregular tone) that makes each piece more visually distinctive over time.

  • Fiore Wall Lamp — A wall lamp in a floral-inspired form (Fiore: Italian for flower) at an accessible price point. A compact, decorative wall sconce suited to bedroom, corridor, and entryway applications.

For the complete wall sconce range across all materials and finishes, explore wall sconces.

Premium Table Lamps

Table lamps serve two distinct functions in an interior: they provide task and accent lighting at the human scale, and they introduce sculptural form and material presence to the surfaces they occupy. A well-chosen table lamp on a bedside table, console, or side table operates simultaneously as a light source and as a considered decorative object, its base material (ceramic, wood, metal, stone, resin), shade form, and proportion all contribute to the room's material language.

  • Glimmer Table Lamp — A table lamp that captures and refracts ambient light through its material surface, the Glimmer name signals a surface quality designed to interact with surrounding light rather than simply project it.
  • Elara Table Lamp — Named after Elara, one of Jupiter's moons — a compact, luminous form suited to bedside and study room applications. The celestial naming signals an object designed to bring a quiet, lunar quality of light to intimate spaces.
  • Ambra Table Lamp — Ambra (Italian for amber) a table lamp in warm amber tones. Amber as a lamp material or finish is particularly effective in bedrooms and living rooms where warm, low-colour-temperature light (2700K–3000K) supports the biological circadian rhythm and the psychological sense of evening relaxation.
  • Tern Table Lamp — Named after the tern (a migratory seabird known for its elegant, arcing flight form), a table lamp with a silhouette that references natural movement.
  • Lune Table Lamp — Lune (French for moon), a lunar-form table lamp whose spherical or crescent profile introduces the quality of moonlight diffused, soft, non-directional to the bedside or console surface.
  • Natura Table Lamp — A table lamp with a natural material base — wood, stone-effect, or organic ceramic that anchors the biophilic interior vocabulary at the intimate lamp scale.
  • Garnet Table Lamp — Named after the garnet gemstone a deep red to burgundy semi-precious mineral (a silicate mineral group, hardness 6.5–7.5 on the Mohs scale) used as a gemstone since the Bronze Age. The Garnet table lamp carries the warm, jewel-toned palette of its namesake.
  • Petal Table Lamp — A table lamp in a petal-inspired form is the botanical vocabulary applied to lamp shade design for a soft, organic light dispersion.
  • Iris Table Lamp — Named after both the iris flower (Iridaceae family, native to the Northern Hemisphere) and Iris, the Greek goddess of the rainbow, a table lamp that references both botanical form and the spectrum of light.
  • Jasper Table Lamp — Named after jasper, an opaque variety of microcrystalline quartz occurring in red, yellow, brown, and green, used in decorative arts since ancient Egypt. A table lamp that carries the earthy, mineral colour range of its gemstone namesake.
  • Slate Table Lamp — A table lamp in a slate-grey finish one of the most architecturally neutral and interior-design-adaptable pieces in the range. Slate as a material vocabulary references the cool, composed aesthetic of industrial and minimal interiors.
  • Toscano Table Lamp — Named after the Toscana (Tuscany) region of Italy — evoking the warm, terracotta, and ochre palette of Tuscan architecture and the handcrafted ceramic tradition of the region's artisan studios.
  • Serenita Table Lamp — Serenita (Italian diminutive of serena: calm, serene), a table lamp named for the quality of light it delivers: soft, unhurried, and conducive to the calming atmosphere of a bedroom or reading corner.

For the complete table lamp range, explore table lamps.

Designer Floor Lamps

Floor lamps operate at human scale they introduce a vertical light source into the room's lower half, below the ceiling plane, where pendant and chandelier light does not reach. This makes them the most important lamp format for creating layered, multi-source lighting in a living room or bedroom. The lighting condition that interior designers identify as most closely approximating the warmth and visual complexity of natural daylight in an interior.

  • Paper Totem Floor Lamp — A statement floor lamp in a totem-form paper or washi paper construction. The totem form,stacked cylindrical or disc elements of decreasing size is one of the most compositionally resolved floor lamp silhouettes: it introduces strong vertical movement and creates multiple light-emission points at different heights simultaneously.
  • DOMUS Floor Lamp — Small — DOMUS (Latin for house, home), a floor lamp whose name signals its positioning as a foundational home lighting piece. A small-format DOMUS suited to reading corners, bedroom ambient lighting, and study room task applications.
  • Vespera Floor Lamp — Vespera (from the Latin vesper: evening star, evening light), a floor lamp designed for the evening domestic lighting register: warm, directional, and creating the intimate pool of light that transforms a living room from daytime functional to evening atmospheric.
  • Loom Floor Lamp — A floor lamp referencing the loom, the weaving apparatus central to textile production. A woven or textile-shaded floor lamp that introduces fabric warmth and the quality of filtered, diffused light into the room's lower ambient zone.

For the complete floor lamp range, explore floor lamps.

Statement Chandeliers

The chandelier range within the Lights & Art collection represents the ceiling-level sculpture category, multi-arm and multi-material fixtures that operate at the scale of the room's architecture. With chandelier pieces available, this is a curated rather than comprehensive range, every piece is selected as a statement object in its own right. Explore the full chandeliers collection for the complete range.

The Art Collection

With original and studio artworks, the TLI art collection within this edit is the most comprehensive single-platform art offering available through an Indian home decor context, spanning distinct style categories, works by 4 named independent Indian artists and multiple independent studios, and formats from A4-scale prints to large-format canvas works suited to feature walls.

Abstract Art

Abstract art is the most interior-design-adaptable art category, its non-representational forms work across the widest range of room styles, colour palettes, and interior aesthetics without requiring thematic alignment. The TLI abstract art range spans gestural mark-making, geometric abstraction, colour field works, and mixed-media pieces. Explore abstract art for the complete range.

Tropical Art

Tropical art, botanical illustrations of monsoon-climate flora, jungle leaf compositions, bird-of-paradise and banana leaf forms are the most popular art style in Indian residential interiors. Its prevalence reflects the biophilic pull of living in a tropical country: Indian interiors have always sought to bring the lushness of the outdoor environment inside. The TLI tropical art range includes large-format leaf prints, multi-panel tropical compositions, and original tropical works in oil, acrylic, and digital media. Explore tropical art.

Minimal Art

The largest art sub-category in the collection reflecting the dominance of the minimal aesthetic in contemporary Indian interior design. Minimal art operates through restraint: a single line, a geometric form, a limited palette. Its visual quiet makes it the most flexible art style for rooms with strong furniture and lighting statements, where the art needs to contribute without competing. Explore minimal art.

Scandinavian Art

Scandinavian art is characterised by clean lines, muted palettes (sage, dusty pink, warm grey, off-white), stylised botanical and animal motifs, and the visual calm of Nordic design aesthetics — is the second-most popular art style for Indian homes after tropical. Its resonance in Indian interiors reflects the broad adoption of Japandi and Scandinavian interior aesthetics in urban Indian design. Explore Scandinavian art.

Art Sets

Art sets are coordinated multi-panel works designed to be displayed together. The most efficient art purchasing decision for filling a wall surface coherently. A two or three-panel set provides the visual scale of a large work in pieces that can be shipped, handled, and hung more easily than a single large canvas. The TLI art sets range spans abstract, tropical, botanical, and Scandinavian coordinated sets. Explore art sets.

Botanical Art

Botanical art is detailed, scientific-style illustrations of plants, flowers, herbs, and foliage and also one of the oldest traditions in Western decorative art, with roots in the illustrated herbals of the Renaissance period and the natural history paintings of the 18th-century naturalist tradition. In contemporary Indian interiors, botanical prints introduce a sense of cultivated knowledge, reference both the Indian and the British colonial natural history tradition, and work as wall art in kitchens, studies, and dining rooms. Explore botanical art.

Art by Independent Indian Artists

The TLI Lights & Art collection includes original works by four named independent Indian artists whose practices represent the breadth of contemporary Indian studio art:

  • Namrata Kumar — Works characterised by textured, layered compositions with a distinctive material surface quality.
  • Ajay Patil — A studio practice with a strong colour and compositional identity.
  • Studio Kishangarh —A Rajasthani miniature art style developed in the 18th-century Kishangarh court, characterised by elongated faces, lotus-petal eyes, and stylised landscapes. Most recognisable and culturally specific Indian art forms available in the contemporary decorative art market.
  • Gradient — Vedang Agnihotri — Gradient-based textured works that reference light transitions and painterly surface exploration.

How Lighting and Art Work Together in an Interior

Colour temperature and art perception. The colour temperature of a light source directly affects how a work of art reads on the wall. Light at 2700K (warm white, the colour of incandescent bulbs and candles) enriches warm tones in a painting such as ochres, reds, and golden yellows but may dull cool blues and greens. Light at 3000K (warm white LED) is the most art-neutral for general display. Light at 4000K (neutral white) is closer to daylight and renders cool tones more accurately. For art display in a residential context, 2700K–3000K directional accent lighting (a spotlight or picture light) is the professional standard, the Illuminating Engineering Society (IES) recommends 50–200 lux for residential art display, with cool- and warm-toned artworks lit by sources at their optimal end of the colour temperature range.

Directional vs ambient lighting for art. Ambient lighting (from a ceiling pendant or chandelier) illuminates the entire room plane uniformly, it allows a work of art to be seen but does not reveal its surface. Directional lighting (from a picture light, adjustable wall sconce, or spotlight) casts light at an angle across the art's surface, revealing texture in oil paint impasto, the grain of a canvas, or the relief of a textured work. The TLI wall sconce collection includes pieces suited to both ambient and directional art lighting applications.

Matching art style to lighting material. The material of a lighting fixture contributes to the room's visual palette and should be considered in relation to the art it will illuminate. A brass wall sconce alongside a warm-palette Kishangarh painting or a golden-toned tropical print creates a material and colour coherence. A matte black pendant or sconce alongside black and white photography or minimal line art creates a monochrome graphic palette. The Lights & Art collection is curated with these adjacencies in mind.

Shop Designer Lights & Original Art Online in India

Buy from the complete Lights & Art collection at The Living Influence — spanning original artworks and designer lighting fixtures, all available with free PAN India shipping. For the full filtered lighting range, explore all lighting. For the complete art catalogue by style, explore the art collection. For interior design consultation on building a lighting and art scheme for a specific room, connect via the interior design consultation service.

FAQs

What is included in the TLI Lights & Art collection?
The collection includes products across two primary categories: original artworks (abstract, tropical, minimal, Scandinavian, botanical, floral, coastal, landscape, art sets, black and white, photography, portrait, architecture, and kids art) and designer lighting fixtures (pendants, table lamps, wall sconces, floor lamps, chandeliers, and wall decor pieces).

What colour temperature is best for lighting art in a residential interior?
The Illuminating Engineering Society (IES) recommends 50–200 lux for residential art display. For general art lighting, 2700K–3000K directional accent lighting is the professional standard — it enriches warm-toned artworks and provides sufficient warmth for living room and dining room contexts. For photography and cool-palette minimal art, a light source closer to 3000K is preferable as it renders cool tones more accurately without the yellowing effect of very warm sources.

What is the Kishangarh painting tradition?
Kishangarh painting is a Rajasthani miniature art style developed in the 18th-century court of Kishangarh (present-day Rajasthan), characterised by elongated, stylised faces with distinctive lotus-petal eyes, arched necks, and idealised natural settings — most famously associated with the Bani Thani portrait, considered the Indian Mona Lisa. The style is one of the most recognisable and culturally specific Indian art forms in the contemporary decorative art market.

How many brass-finish lighting pieces are available in the Lights & Art collection?
The collection includes brass-finish pieces across wall sconces and other lamp formats available in aged brass, brushed brass, burnt brass, and raw brass finishes. These four brass variants represent the principal patination stages of brass as a living material: raw brass (unfinished, bright gold), brushed brass (satin surface, subtle directionality), aged brass (darkened, vintage patina), and burnt brass (deep, oxidised brown-black with gold undertones).

What is the difference between a pendant lamp and a chandelier?
A pendant lamp is a single light fixture suspended from the ceiling on a cord, cable, or rod. A chandelier is a multi-arm or multi-element ceiling fixture with two or more light sources typically larger in scale, more architecturally ornate, and designed to be the primary visual statement of a room's ceiling plane. In the TLI Lights & Art collection, pendants offer single-fixture ceiling solutions while chandeliers provide full architectural ceiling statements.

Which art styles work best in Indian residential interiors?
Interior designers working in Indian residential contexts most frequently specify tropical art (for its biophilic warmth and reference to the Indian natural environment), minimal art (for its visual flexibility across a wide range of interior styles), and Scandinavian art (for its compatibility with the Japandi and Nordic aesthetics prevalent in urban Indian design). Botanical art works particularly well in kitchens, dining rooms, and studies. Abstract art is the most versatile for living rooms with strong furniture and lighting statements.

Can I buy lighting and art together as a coordinated interior scheme?
Yes, the TLI Lights & Art collection is specifically curated to support coordinated lighting and art purchases. The styling guidance on this page covers colour temperature matching, directional vs ambient lighting for art, and material coherence between lamp finishes and art palette. The TLI interior design consultation service can provide personalised guidance on building a specific lighting and art scheme for a room.