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Erik Hoglund Candle Holders

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  • Bamboo Umbrella Holder
    Located in Beverly Hills, CA
    Italian bamboo umbrella holder - Italy circa 1950s Great shape and patina with wonderful function!.
    Category

    Vintage 1950s Italian Umbrella Stands

    Materials

    Bamboo

  • Italian Bamboo Magazine Holder
    Located in Beverly Hills, CA
    Italian bamboo magazine holder or catch all with elongated shape, handle and black iron legs.
    Category

    Vintage 1950s Italian Decorative Baskets

    Materials

    Bamboo

  • Gianfranco Frattini Umbrella Holder
    By Gianfranco Frattini
    Located in Beverly Hills, CA
    Gianfranco Frattini for Cassina umbrella holder in white wood. Aluminum insert to protect for water.
    Category

    Vintage 1960s Italian Umbrella Stands

    Materials

    Wood

  • Jacques Adnet Magazine Holder
    By Jacques Adnet
    Located in Beverly Hills, CA
    Jacques Adnet magazine or book holder in red leather, iron and brass Sliding dividers on both sides to keep books or magazine in place.
    Category

    Vintage 1940s French Magazine Racks and Stands

    Materials

    Brass

  • Guillerme et Chambron Magazine Holder
    By Guillerme et Chambron
    Located in Beverly Hills, CA
    Guillerme et Chambron magazine or book holder with wonderful oak patina and thick dowel design Sold individually
    Category

    Vintage 1940s French Magazine Racks and Stands

    Materials

    Oak

  • Jacques Adnet Leather Notepad/ Pencil Holder
    By Jacques Adnet
    Located in Beverly Hills, CA
    Jacques Adnet attributed wall hanging notepad holder with built in pencil. Notepad can slide into leather sling to write down grocery list /or notes.
    Category

    Vintage 1940s French Decorative Art

    Materials

    Leather

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  • Mid-Century Candle Holder, Iron and Glass, attr. to Erik Höglund
    By Erik Höglund
    Located in Bochum, NRW
    A unique candle holder made of black painted iron and transparent glass, in the well known style of Erik Höglund. The glass element decorate artistically de black painted iron stem, ...
    Category

    Vintage 1950s Swedish Mid-Century Modern Candlesticks

    Materials

    Iron

  • Erik Höglund for Kosta Boda, Sweden. Rare two-armed hanging candle holder
    Located in Copenhagen, DK
    Erik Höglund (1932-1998) for Kosta Boda, Sweden. Rare two-armed hanging candle holder in cast iron and mouth-blown art glass. Mid-20th century. In perfect condition. Dimensions: H 3...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century Swedish Scandinavian Modern Candle Lamps

    Materials

    Iron

  • Erik Höglund, Kosta Boda. Two-armed hanging candle holder. Cast iron and glass
    Located in Copenhagen, DK
    Erik Höglund (1932-1998) for Kosta Boda, Sweden. Rare two-armed hanging candle holder in cast iron and mouth-blown art glass. Mid-20th century. In perfect condition. Dimensions: H 35...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century Swedish Scandinavian Modern Candle Lamps

    Materials

    Iron

  • Erik Hoglund Pair of Candle Holders, Blue and Clear Glass, Mid-Century, Sweden
    By Erik Höglund, Boda
    Located in Bochum, NRW
    Pair of candle holders with clear and blue glass on a black iron body by Erik Hoglund for Boda, Sweden, 1960s. Base and top made of black painted metal. Body made of ribbed blue art...
    Category

    Vintage 1950s Swedish Mid-Century Modern Candlesticks

    Materials

    Iron

  • Midcentury Candle Chandelier, Erik Höglund, Boda, Sweden, 1960s
    By Boda, Erik Höglund
    Located in Stockholm, SE
    Stunning, oversized candle chandelier by Erik Höglund, made from wrought iron and glass. The long, rustic iron frame is adorned with different sized glass medallions that look like large rain drops on a bare tree. The biggest medallions are embossed with patterns of fish. Height 190 + 37 cm. Erik Höglund was one of Sweden’s foremost glass artists, whose innovative designs and glass making techniques revolutionized the scene of both art glass and serve ware in the 1950s. His bold and personal designs gave him and the glassworks Boda worldwide acclaim. Erik Höglund is considered the most influential Swedish glass artist of the 1950s and 1960s, alongside Ingeborg Lundin. Höglund was admitted to the prestigious school Konstfack at the age of 16, first studying to become an art teacher, but later changing to the sculptor’s line. He rebelled against many of what he considered to be conventional ideas at the school, and was almost expelled. His nonconformism would follow him through his career, aiding him in following his own path and repeatedly breaking new ground. Erik Höglund started working at Boda glassworks in 1953. At the time, Boda focused on producing high-quality serve ware in ethereal, cut-glass designs under the direction of Fritz Kallenberg. Höglund brought new perspectives and ideas, experimenting with the glass mass to give it a bubbly look and introducing colored glass and irregular finishes. These ideas were in direct opposition to the traditional ideas of what quality glass is, and Höglund was initially met with skepticism. He created rustic designs that allowed for everyday, multiple uses of glass, allowing it to be both functional and aesthetic. This down-to-earth idea appealed to both critics and collectors, although it took some years into the 1950s to win over the general public. In 1955, Erik Höglund’s glass was presented at the H55 Exhibition and one of his vases, whilst considered scandalous due to its suggestive decor, was purchased by the Swedish king. In 1957 he was awarded the Lunning Prize, its until then youngest awardee. Following that, his glass was exhibited in the Georg Jensen store on 5th Avenue in New York, making Erik Höglund and Boda world renowned. Erik Höglund was a master of all artistic trades. His glass murals were an important part of his artistic deed, leading to many assignments of public decorations, around Sweden in churches, schools, banks and other public places, as well as in the United States and Australia. In the early 1960s he also started working with wrought iron, making chandeliers and candelabras, combined with glass or unadorned, that became hugely popular. Boda opened its own smithy, Boda Smide, to satisfy the demand. Höglund also worked with wood, creating rustic and playful children’s furniture, candle holders and beds. Höglund left Boda in 1973 and worked with public assignments, often in collaboration with architects and his wife Ingrid Höglund. He continued to work with glass throughout the years for Pukeberg, Lindshammar and Strömbergshyttan glass works. He was was an incredibly productive artist, creating 150 public works from 1956 into the 1990s. Life cycles, sports and acrobatics, everyday life and family relationships were recurring sources of inspiration. Among his most notable work is the decoration of Johannelund Church in Linköping, which consisted of murals, glass sections, furnishing and the church silver...
    Category

    Vintage 1960s Swedish Scandinavian Modern Candelabras

    Materials

    Wrought Iron

  • Erik Höglund for Kosta Boda, Large Candle Holder in Cast Iron with Art Glass
    Located in Copenhagen, DK
    Erik Höglund for Kosta Boda, large candle holder in cast iron with mouth blown glass. Mid 20th century. In excellent condition. Measures 44 x 42.5 cm.
    Category

    Mid-20th Century Swedish Scandinavian Modern Candelabras

    Materials

    Wrought Iron

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