Lighting’s Little Detective in “Search for the Book”

The Zumtobel Group continues its tradition of enlisting architects and designers to create its annual report.

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The Zumtobel Group's 2016-2017 Annual Report, "The Little Detective: Search for the Book," by architect Yung Ho Chang.

Courtesy The Zumtobel Group

The Zumtobel Group's 2016-2017 Annual Report, "The Little Detective: Search for the Book," by architect Yung Ho Chang.

This story was originally published in Architectural Lighting.

For companies that produce products for architecture and lighting, design and business often come together in unique ways. For the past 26 years, the Zumtobel Group—parent company of six international lighting brands including Zumtobel, acdc, and Thorn—has partnered with architects and designers in the creation of its yearly business communiqué. For its 2016/17 Annual Report, the company selected Yung Ho Chang, an American-Chinese architect and professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who has developed a character called “The Little Detective,” based on a story told to him as a child by his father. Using drawings, paintings, and photographs he produced between 1998 and 2016, Chang tells a tale of the Little Detective searching for a lost book and encountering “the opposing forces of light and darkness.”

To read more stories like this, visit Architectural Lighting.

About the Author

Elizabeth Donoff

Elizabeth Donoff is Editor-at-Large of Architectural Lighting (AL). She served as Editor-in-Chief from 2006 to 2017. She joined the editorial team in 2003 and is a leading voice in the lighting community speaking at industry events such as Lightfair and the International Association of Lighting Designers Annual Enlighten Conference, and has twice served as a judge for the Illuminating Engineering Society New York City Section’s (IESNYC) Lumen Award program. In 2009, she received the Brilliance Award from the IESNYC for dedicated service and contribution to the New York City lighting community. Over the past 11 years, under her editorial direction, Architectural Lighting has received a number of prestigious B2B journalism awards. In 2017, Architectural Lighting was a Top Ten Finalist for Magazine of the Year from the American Society of Business Publication Editors' AZBEE Awards. In 2016, Donoff received the Jesse H. Neal Award for her Editor’s Comments in the category of Best Commentary/Blog, and in 2015, AL received a Jesse H. Neal Award for Best Media Brand (Overall Editorial Excellence).Prior to her entry into design journalism, Donoff worked in New York City architectural offices including FXFowle where she was part of the project teams for the Reuters Building at Three Times Square and the New York Times Headquarters. She is a graduate of Bates College in Lewiston, Me., and she earned her Master of Architecture degree from the School of Architecture at Washington University in St. Louis.

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