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Holmegaard Atlantis

Holmegaard 'Atlantis' White Glass Candlestick Holder / Vase by Michael Bang
By Holmegaard, Michael Bang
Located in Bolton, GB
used as a small vase. Made by Holmegaard of Denmark and designed by Michael Bang, part of his Atlantis
Category

Vintage 1960s Danish Mid-Century Modern Glass

Materials

Glass, Art Glass, Blown Glass

Michael Bang vase for Holmegaard
By Holmegaard
Located in Geneva, CH
Little round vase designed by Michael Bang for Holmegaard, Copenhagen. From the Atlantis series
Category

Vintage 1980s Danish Scandinavian Modern Vases

Materials

Glass

Michael Bang vase for Holmegaard
Michael Bang vase for Holmegaard
H 3.94 in W 3.94 in D 3.94 in
Holmegaard Michael Bang Vase
By Michael Bang, Holmegaard
Located in Dronten, NL
Round vase designed by Michael Bang for Holmegaard, Copenhagen. From the Atlantis series made in
Category

Vintage 1980s Danish Mid-Century Modern Vases

Materials

Blown Glass

Holmegaard Michael Bang Vase
Holmegaard Michael Bang Vase
H 9.06 in Dm 8.27 in
Michael Bang 1980s White, Black, Blue Art Glass Atlantis Vase
By Michael Bang, Holmegaard
Located in Copenhagen, DK
series Atlantis by art glass designer Michael Bang for Danish Holmegaard. Beautiful, unused condition
Category

Late 20th Century Danish Post-Modern Vases

Materials

Glass, Art Glass

Recent Sales

'Atlantis' Table Lamp by Hans Schwazer for Holmegaard
By Holmegaard
Located in Hemiksem, BE
Extremely rare Atlantis table lamp by Hans Schwazer for Holmegaard (Denmark, 1976). This
Category

Mid-20th Century Danish Table Lamps

Materials

Metal

Vintage Minimalist Table Lamp 'Atlantis' by Hans Schwazer for Holmegaard, 1970s
By Hans Schwazer
Located in Esbjerg, DK
was manufactured by Holmegaard only in a few years.
Category

Vintage 1970s Danish Minimalist Table Lamps

Materials

Aluminum, Steel

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Holmegaard for sale on 1stDibs

Holmegaard has been creating quality glassware for almost two centuries. The legendary glassworks has collaborated with scores of celebrated designers over its long history, including Arne Jacobsen, Louise Campbell, Bodil Kjær and many others, with each artisan crafting vases, bottles and other serveware and decorative objects that are widely loved by collectors and art connoisseurs alike. Today Holmegaard is a powerhouse of functionalist modern Danish glass design.

Holmegaard Glassworks was the dream of Danish Count Christian Danneskiold-Samsøe, who petitioned the king of Denmark for permission to build a factory. Sadly, by the time permission was granted, the count had passed away, leaving his dowager, the Countess Henriette Danneskiold-Samsøe, to carry on her late husband’s dream in 1825. The factory was established in the town of Fensmark in the Holmegaard bog, where rich peat could be harvested and used to fuel the high-temperature kilns required to produce glass there.

The factory initially produced only simple mouth-blown green glass packaging bottles — the need was for glassware that was merely functional. It wasn’t until the 1920s that it made progress as a significant entity in the world of design. There was a fruitful partnership to create dinner glassware with the Royal Danish Porcelain Factory and glass artist Oluf Jensen. This was followed in 1925 by Holmegaard’s hiring Jacob Eiler Bang as the glassworks’ first in-house designer.

Bang was trained as an architect and was working on the Danish Pavilion at the International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts — the fair that brought the Art Deco style to worldwide attention — when his efforts caught the attention of Holmegaard. Bang believed in the concept of making things that were “beautiful, strong, practical and cheap.” His seductive, functionalist designs for vases, decanters, bottles and other objects — guided by the theories that underpin Scandinavian modernism — garnered acclaim for both Bang and Holmegaard, and he became known as one of the fathers of functionalism in Danish glassware.

Holmegaard went on to work with Per Lütken, who created intricate objects that redefined the factory’s style and Danish glass design as a whole. Lütken produced over 3,000 pieces for the glassworks, including the revered Provence bowl, one of the pieces for which the glassworks is best known. The brand went on to work with other notable artists including Otto Brauer and Jacob Bang’s son, Michael Bang, whose Palet range, Fontaine wine glass range, and Mandarin lamps are among Holmegaard’s most iconic creations.

Today, Holmegaard Glassworks is owned by Rosendahl Design Group. It is Denmark’s largest manufacturer of glass in addition to being the oldest and most historic.

Find vintage Holmegaard sconces, vessels, decorative bowls, tableware and other pieces on 1stDibs.