Soft colour, glowing glass, and a hint of Italian poetry-Murano finds a new rhythm in modern interiors.
Written by Kando Studio, exploring the intersection of art and interior design.
There’s a quiet magic when glass meets light, and few materials do it with the grace of Murano. Hand-blown on the Venetian islands, these pieces carry centuries of tradition, yet in modern interiors they feel utterly present-a suspended moment of colour, a flicker of reflection, a whisper of shape that moves through a room. Murano glass is not decoration; it is architecture of light, atmosphere, and gesture.
A ceiling lamp can transform a space as decisively as its walls or floors. The Elongated Pink Red Multicolored Murano Glass and Brass Ceiling Lamp, Italy twists across the ceiling like molten sculpture. Its brass frame anchors the movement while the glass arcs in fiery ribbons of pink and red. By day, it captures sunlight in delicate glimmers; by evening, it becomes an ember suspended above the space. It’s playful, commanding, alive-a piece that makes architecture feel more fluid, more intimate.

Vases whisper rather than shout. The Sestiere Vase by Patricia Urquiola for Cassina is a soft green ripple of glass that catches light like water in motion. On a console, it inhabits the space, responding to shadows and reflections with quiet elegance. Murano’s capacity to occupy corners, edges, and niches of a room without demanding dominance is one of its quietest powers.

Murano can also surprise. A Pop Comic Artistic Murano Glass Sculpture injects humour and narrative into interiors. Its exaggerated forms and saturated colours draw the eye, yet, in a neutral or textured backdrop, it feels utterly natural. This duality-bold yet adaptabl-is Murano at its most contemporary: a bridge between centuries of craft and the playful rhythms of today’s homes.

Complementing this is the Pair of Brown Pink Glass Pendants, Italy. Suspended in tandem, their smoky tones and delicate forms create a softer, layered glow over dining tables or seating areas. Light refracts gently through the glass, casting subtle shadows that animate the room throughout the day.

Even smaller fixtures carry sculptural weight. The Lady V 4-Light Pink Wall Lamp, Artemest demonstrates how glass can shape both space and mood. Its curves and translucency transform walls into planes of soft light, punctuating textures, colors, and architecture with quiet assertiveness. In modern interiors, these pieces feel less like objects and more like companions, responsive to the room and to the rhythms of daily life.

What unites these examples is Murano’s sculptural capacity. From sweeping ceiling lamps to modest vases and playful figurines, each piece carries an artisan’s intent — the rhythm of the hand, the echo of centuries-old techniques. In modern interiors, Murano works because it speaks the language of architecture: proportion, scale, and movement. A chandelier curves with the ceiling; a vase mirrors the table; a small sculpture punctuates an empty shelf. Murano gives a space a sense of dialogue, a breath between objects and light.
Small objects in particular reveal Murano’s intimacy. A sculptural vase, a coloured glass form, a whimsical figure-they invite touch, curiosity, and pause. They provide character without clutter, layering narrative over architecture. Collectible Murano objects, curated thoughtfully, allow interiors to feel lived-in yet elevated, personal yet timeless. They remind us that design is as much about emotion as it is about aesthetics.
Ultimately, Murano glass is a language of light and form. It is historical yet modern, monumental yet intimate, sculptural yet subtle. The five curated pieces highlighted here-from the Elongated Pink Red Multicolored Ceiling Lamp to the Lady V 4-Light Wall Lamp-illustrate Murano’s capacity to transform interiors into spaces that feel alive, fluid, and emotionally resonant. They are more than objects; they are instruments for shaping mood, perception, and atmosphere.
Murano glass teaches us that interiors are not just functional; they are experiential. Each curve, each colour, each flicker of reflection contributes to a room’s voice. In modern homes, Murano allows design to breathe-to be expressive, tactile, and quietly bold. Sculptural vases, glowing pendants, and playful figurines become conduits for imagination, turning walls, shelves, and tables into a living gallery.

