INSIDE MARSET & JOAN GASPAR STUDIO

BARCELONA, SPAIN

During a recent visit to Marset and the studio of Joan Gaspar, creative director of the brand and one of the key figures behind many of its designs, _____ we had the opportunity to step inside the creative process behind one of Barcelona’s most internationally recognised lighting companies.

What fascinated us most was the balance between industrial rigor and human warmth. Despite the technical complexity behind each product, _________ the process never felt distant or purely technical. Instead, everything seemed guided by a quiet attention to how light is ultimately experienced: how it softens a room, creates intimacy, frames objects or transforms the perception of a space.

There is also something particularly Mediterranean in the way Marset approaches lighting: a certain warmth, restraint and timelessness that avoids spectacle in favour of atmosphere. ________ The objects do not seek to dominate the space, but to coexist with it naturally.

Joan Gaspar’s studio

Visiting Joan Gaspar’s studio offered another layer to this experience. Beyond the final products, it was interesting to observe the relationship between design, process and _____ everyday life: shelves filled with prototypes, materials accumulated over time, references, tests and ongoing ideas shaping the creative environment.

More than a visit to a lighting company, the experience felt like entering a broader conversation about design culture, material sensitivity _____________ and the emotional role objects play within architecture and interiors.