A Lens That Refuses to Sit Back
There is something quietly disarming about the Concavo Collection from Tracy Glover Studio, a series that subtly rethinks how light and glass relate. Rather than allowing illumination to recede behind the glass, Concavo brings it forward, turning the studio’s signature lens into an active participant. The result feels deliberate and modern, while still unmistakably handmade.
Concavo builds on the visual language of the earlier Lens Collection, but the shift in composition changes the experience entirely. Light now interacts directly with the curved glass surface, creating depth instead of diffusion. The lens behaves less like a shade and more like a looking glass, shaping light as an object. It is a quiet recalibration, but one that gives the fixtures a stronger architectural presence.
Available as pendants, sconces, and flush mounts, the collection is especially compelling as architectural glass lighting used in multiples. Grouped across a wall or ceiling plane, the fixtures introduce rhythm and dimension without visual noise. The colored glass functions as an accent rather than ornament, making the system easy to layer into shared environments where atmosphere matters as much as performance.
What stands out is restraint. Despite its sculptural form and expansive palette, the collection never tips into excess. It shares a thoughtful lineage with earlier work from the studio, including the celestial sensibility explored in Women Designers: Tracy Glover Gets Celestial with Rondel Sconce + Constellation Chandelier.
Concavo feels true to the brand, yet clearly evolved. Architectural glass lighting that does not sit back, but quietly insists on being part of the conversation.
Images Courtesy of Tracy Glover Studio




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