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PAIR 19th Century Famille Rose Chinese Porcelain Lamps with handles Very Vibrant
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
PAIR 19th Century Famille Rose Chinese Porcelain Lamps with handles Very Vibrant colors will enhance any interior. The Porcelain portion measures 16.5 inches tall.
Category
Antique 1890s Chinese Table Lamps
Materials
Porcelain
PAIR Aureliano Toso Dino Martens Attributed Patchwork Latticino Murano lamps
By Dino Martens
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
PAIR Aureliano Toso Dino Martens Attributed Patchwork Latticino Murano lamps
Category
Vintage 1950s Italian Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
Materials
Blown Glass
Rare PAIR Tommi Parzinger Model 6362 Floor Lamps Original finish and shades
By Tommi Parzinger
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Rare PAIR Tommi Parzinger Model 6362 Floor Lamps Original finish and shades. Signed on each base with model number and Parzinger Original. One is hard to find, a pair almost impossib...
Category
Vintage 1950s American Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
Materials
Wood
Rivière Studios Grapevine Pattern Early Art Nouveau Panel Lamp
By Riviere Studios
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Rivière Studios Grapevine Pattern Early Art Nouveau panel Lamp Made in the style of Tiffany Studios. The lamp glows nicely on any table. A rare find.
Category
Vintage 1920s American Art Nouveau Table Lamps
Materials
Glass
French Regency Style Portoro Multi Color Marble Pair Amazing Lamps
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
French Regency Style Portoro multi color Marble PAIR Amazing lamps With detailed hardware. Measurements are given to the top of the socket without h...
Category
Vintage 1950s Regency Table Lamps
Materials
Marble
Pair Barovier and Toso Murano Glass Lamps by Ercole Barovier White with Silver
By Barovier&Toso
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Pair Barovier and Toso Murano glass lamps by Ercole Barovier white with silver flecks. Applied clear band and applied circular rings. Glass height is 17.25. Measurements without harp...
Category
Vintage 1950s Italian Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
Materials
Blown Glass
Pair French Art Deco Signed Art Glass Sconces with Original Mounts, circa 1930s
By Atelier Petitot
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Pair French Art Deco signed Art glass sconces with original mounts circa 1930s. Each glass portion is signed as pictured molded into the glass when made.
Category
Vintage 1930s French Art Deco Wall Lights and Sconces
Materials
Glass
Rare Pair Vistosi Poveglia Murrine Lamps in Plum Murrine Decoration Gae Aulenti
By Gae Aulenti
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Rare pair of Vistosi Poveglia Murrine table lamps in plum. These lamps were designed by Gae Aulenti and are seldom seen on the open market. Finding a pair is virtually impossible. Th...
Category
Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
Materials
Blown Glass
Rare Vistosi Pair Poveglia Murrine Table Lamps Gae Aulenti, 1970s
By Gae Aulenti
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Rare Pair of Vistosi Poveglia Murrine table lamps in vibrant yellow. These lamps were designed by Gae Aulenti and are seldom seen on the open market. Finding a pair is virtually impo...
Category
Vintage 1970s Italian Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
Materials
Blown Glass
Graffito Barbarico Design Lamp by Ercole Barovier for Barovier and Toso
By Ercole Barovier
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Ercole Barovier for Barovier and Toso Murano lamp in Graffito Barbarico design. Internally decorated glass with gold inclusions. Large example in a very desirable technique. Lamp sha...
Category
Vintage 1950s Italian Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
Materials
Blown Glass
Large Murano Urn Form Pair of Lamps with Amazing Decoration
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Amazing pair of Murano urn form lamps in vibrant red with silver foil decoration. Waffled design in the glass makes these lamps very rare and desir...
Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
Materials
Blown Glass
Signed Pair Frederick Cooper Urn Form Lamps in Brass and Lucite
By Frederick Cooper
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Beautiful pair of brass and lucite Urn form lamps by Frederick Cooper. Lamps have an original Frederick Cooper label.
In 1923, Frederick Cooper, a Chicago artist, established a studio to create beautiful sculpture and watercolor paintings. American architecture was in its heyday in the Windy City. Mr. Cooper was drawn to the still fairly new invention of lamps. Through mixing the media of brass, fabric, glass and wood, Cooper created exquisitely designed lamps that matched the swift innovation in American architecture. This heritage carries on today, with designs that are at the forefront of style and fashion. We create the most artistic designs, using exquisite materials and superior craftsmanship.
Quite simply, we design and create illuminated art. We use the finest natural materials - brass, bronze, nickel, copper, marble, jade and alabaster – and also create art glaze ceramics, hand decorated porcelain, and crystal.
Our design committee is in unfettered pursuit of the broadest array of styles - refreshed traditional to transitional with classic lines. These include Deco, Nouveau, Cubist, Organic - clean and elaborate. We have design collaborations with Larry Laslo, Mario Buatta, Alexander Julian...
Category
Vintage 1970s American Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
Materials
Brass
Large Fantoni for Raymor Signed Ceramic Lion Lamp with Original Label
By Marcello Fantoni
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Amazing Lion Form table lamp by Marcello Fantoni for Raymor. Signed and retains its original label.
Marcello Fantoni was Born in Florence on October 1, 1915, Marcello Fantoni reg...
Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Ceramics
Materials
Ceramic
Paul Hanson Pair Crackle Glass Lamps with brass accents circa 1950s
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Great all original pair of Paul Hanson Lighting Company lamps circa 1950’s. Lamps are all original including the hardware and shade rests. The glass radiates when the light hits the ...
Category
Vintage 1950s American Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
Materials
Art Glass
Rare Pair Barovier and Toso Murano Pair Lamps in Pink and Gold Ercole Barovier
By Ercole Barovier
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Amazing pair of Murano Lamps designed by Ercole Barovier for Barovier and Toso. Very intricate detail.
Ercole Barovier is a unique figure in the history of 20th century Murano gl...
Category
Vintage 1950s Italian Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
Materials
Blown Glass
Pair Brass or Bronze Rams Head Lamps by Maitland Smith
By Maitland Smith
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Amazing pair of Maitland Smith lamps with applies rams head decoration. Very stylish and decorative pieces that would enhance any high end interior...
Category
Vintage 1980s American Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
Materials
Brass
Pair Signed Chapman Bronze or Brass Urn Form Lamps with Original Finials
By Chapman Manufacturing Company
Located in Ann Arbor, MI
Large and very decorative pair of Chapman urn form lamps. Lamps are either brass or bronze. Lamps retain original harps and finials. Circa 1980’s.
Chap...
Category
Vintage 1980s American Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
Materials
Brass
Related Items
Rare Murano Glass and Brass Wall Light by Dino Martens for Aureliano Toso, Italy
By Dino Martens, Aureliano Toso
Located in Bresso, Lombardy
Made in Italy, 1950s.
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H 6.11 in Dm 8.08 in
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Chinese Table Lamp, 19th Century with Brass Mount, 19th Century Famille Rose
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USA PLUG ADAPTATOR WILL BE ...
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Category
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Late 19th / Early 20th Century French Art Nouveau Table Lamp
Located in San Francisco, CA
An exceptional wrought iron lamp base. We believe this was probably a custom crafted gas newel post lamp originally. A considerable amount of skilled workmanship went into the iron work with an Art Nouveau design of acorns and oak leaves. The flame glass shade...
Category
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Early 20th C Bronze Art Nouveau Table / Desk Lamp with Handel Shade
Located in San Francisco, CA
A wonderfully unique possibly one of kind bronze lamp with an antique Handel art glass shade.
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Category
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Pair of Table Lamps by Dino Martens for Aureliano Toso, Italy, 1950s
By Dino Martens, Aureliano Toso
Located in Jersey City, NJ
Pair of table lamps in mezza filigrana striped glass, decorative brass spheres between the glass body and the patinated brass-plated metal base.
Shades can be ordered to specification.
Category
Vintage 1950s Italian Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
Materials
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Tiffany Studios Style Art Nouveau Bronze Counterbalance Desk Lamp
By Tiffany Studios
Located in South Bend, IN
A gorgeous Art Nouveau or Arts & Crafts desk lamp or table lamp
In the manner of Tiffany Studios
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Bronze base, with gorgeous Louis Comfort Tiffany style...
Category
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Materials
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Quezal Art Nouveau Lamp
By Quezal
Located in NANTES, FR
Art nouveau lamp circa 1910.
Brass and copper base.
Iridescent glass tulip signed Quezal.
In perfect condition and electrified.
Total height: 38.5 cm
Base diameter: 15.5 cm
Width: 30 cm
Quezal Art Glass
Quezal Art Glass – The Journal of Antiques and Collectibles – April 2003
By Malcolm Mac Neil
Some of the most beautiful and alluring art glass made in America during the early part of the 20th Century was made by the Quezal Art Glass and Decorating Company. Often in the shape of blossoming lilies with brilliant gold interiors and colorfully decorated with floral and other motifs inspired by nature, Quezal art glass ranks right alongside the iridescent glass of Louis Comfort Tiffany and Frederick Carder. Quezal artisans created an extensive range of decorative and useful items, including vases, compotes, finger bowls, open salts, candle holders, and shades for lighting fixtures, which are equivalent in terms of beauty and quality of craftsmanship to Tiffany’s Favrile and Carder’s Aurene glass. In recent years, glass collectors have discovered anew the special charms and appeal of Quezal art glass, and collector desirability for this lovely glassware has increased dramatically.
The Quezal Art Glass and Decorating Company was incorporated a century ago, on March 27, 1902. It was founded by Martin Bach, Sr., Thomas Johnson, Nicholas Bach, Lena Scholtz, and Adolph Demuth. The factory was located on the corner of Fresh Pond Road and Metropolitan Avenue in Maspeth, Queens, New York. In October 1902, the trademark “Quezal” was successfully registered. By 1904, roughly fifty glassworkers were employed at the works.
Martin Bach, Sr. was the president, proprietor, and guiding force behind this successful company. Born in 1862 in Alsace-Lorraine to German parents, he emigrated to the United States in 1891. Before his emigration, Bach worked in Saint-Louis, France, at the Saint-Louis Glass Factory. After Bach arrived in this country, he was hired by Louis C. Tiffany as the latter’s first batch-mixer or chemist at the newly established Tiffany Glass and Decorating Company, in Corona, Queens. After a period of about eight years, Bach left Tiffany and established his own glassworks. By this time, Bach had already started his small family. He and his German-born wife, Anne-Marie Geisser, whom he married in the fall of 1889, in Paris, France, had three children. Two daughters, Jennie and Louise, were born in France and a son, Martin, Jr., was born in Corona.
Bach was assisted by Thomas Johnson, an English immigrant, and Maurice Kelly, a native of Corona, both of whom were gaffers or master glassblowers. Johnson and Kelly helped pave the way for Quezal’s early accomplishments and later recognition. Thomas Johnson, like Bach, was a founding member and also previously employed by Louis C. Tiffany. Johnson’s association with Quezal, however, was relatively short lived. Around 1907, Johnson left for Somerville, Massachusetts, where he became involved in making Kew Blas glass, under William S. Blake at the Union Glass Company. Maurice Kelly’s tenure with Quezal was also brief. Kelly worked at Quezal from January 1902 until July 1904, but by November 1904, he was making Favrile glass at Tiffany Furnaces, where he would happily remain until 1918.
To this day, the belief still exists that there once existed a man named Quezal, who worked for Louis C. Tiffany, and it is after him that Quezal glass is named. In truth, however, the founders of the Quezal Art Glass and Decorating Company named the company and its products after one of the world’s most beautiful birds, the elusive and rare quetzal, which dwells in the treetops of the remote tropical forests of Central America. A rare company promotional brochure provides a vivid description of the quetzal: Of all the birds of the America’s, it is the most gorgeous. No more splendid sight is to be seen in all the world than a quezal, flying like a darting flame through the depths of a Central American forest. Its back is of a brilliant metallic green, so vivid it shines even in the twilight of the woods like a great emerald and its breast is a crimson so deep and bright that every motion of the wonderful creature is a flashing of rubies among the trees and giant creepers. It bears a true golden crown upon its head – a helmet of bright yellow and green, shaped just as the helmet of old Aztec kings were shaped. Its tail is composed of lacelike plumes, extending more than two and one-half feet beyond its body.
The quezal was certainly an appropriate designation for the company’s resplendent glassware. One of the most prized characteristics of Quezal art glass is the shimmering and dazzling brilliance reflected in the iridescent surfaces on the interior as well as exterior of the glass. The radiant rainbow colors in metallic hues, including gold, purple, blue, green, and pink, to name only a few, were certainly inspired by the quetzal and its feathers. Not surprisingly, lustrous feathers, in shades of opal, gold, emerald, and blue, are among the most common decorative motifs encountered on Quezal glass.
The enduring hallmark of Quezal art glass is its unique expression of the Art Nouveau style, based on organic shapes and naturalistic motifs coupled with technical perfection in the execution. Vases, compotes, drinking vessels, and shades for lighting fixtures were often fashioned to resemble flowers such as crocuses, tulips, calla lilies, casablanca lilies, and jack-in-the-pulpits. Variously colored inlaid threads of glass, pulled and twisted by hooks, simulate naturalistic floral and leaf patterns, lily pads, clover leafs, and vines. Opal, gold, and green colors prevail and the glass is generally opaque. Red is the rarest color of all. Compared with Tiffany’s Favrile glass, the crisp, vivid, and colorful decoration of Quezal art glass is distinctively precise, symmetrical, and restrained.
Other Quezal wares recall shapes and styles favored in ancient Egypt, Persia, Greece, and Rome, as well as the Italian Renaissance and the Georgian period in England. This is especially true of classic-shaped vases and bowls of translucent amber glass, which have a single surface color such as iridescent gold or blue. Still, others were inspired by traditional Chinese and Japanese forms.
The Gorham Manufacturing Company in Providence, Rhode Island, and the Alvin Silver Manufacturing Company in Sag Harbor, Long Island, purchased Quezal art glass, which they in turn embellished in their shops with silver overlay decoration in the fashionable Art Nouveau style and later resold. Gorham’s silver overlay designs mostly include stylized floral motifs. Alvin’s silver designs are wonderfully organic. One sumptuous design is of a group of sinuous iris blossoms with carefully articulated petals surrounded by attenuated meandering vines. Collectors should note that not all silver-deposit pieces are marked with a maker’s mark since the silversmith had to be quite careful not to damage the glass underneath.
A rare 1907 retail catalog survives from Bailey, Banks, and Biddle Company, a luxury goods retailer in Philadelphia, which reveals original retail prices of Quezal art glass. A surprising revelation provided by this catalog is that Quezal art glass was nearly twice as expensive as comparable French imported glass made by such renowned firms as Gallé and Daum. Hock glasses, a stemmed glass used primarily for drinking German white wine, were sold by the dozen and retailed between $50 and $75. Fingerbowls were also sold by the dozen and retailed between $50 and $100. These high retail prices were nearly the same as those charged for Tiffany’s Favrile glass, and suggest Quezal art glass was also marketed towards the high-end or luxury market.
Electricity was a brand new invention in the late 1800s and American glass manufacturers developed novel approaches for concealing the electric light bulb, which was rather harsh to the eye and perhaps unflattering to the domestic interior. Tiffany, Steuben, and Quezal responded to this need with the most extraordinary and beautiful art-glass shades, all of which were hand-made and exquisitely fashioned. Many other companies also made art glass shades for table and floor lamps, electroliers, hallway fixtures, and wall sconces, but it was Quezal that excelled in this area and was the most prolific.
Quezal art glass shades were available in an infinite variety of shapes, sizes, colors, and decorations. Some shades are formed and decorated as lilies while others are bell-shaped and have ribbed or textured decoration. Rims are usually plain but sometimes are notched or ruffled. Common motifs include feather or hooked feather, leaf and vine, applied flowers, drape, fishnet, King Tut, and spider webbing. The workmanship shown on most Quezal shades...
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Amazing Pair of French Sea Life Table Lamps, France
Located in Voorburg, NL
Unique and beautiful pair of sea life midcentury table lamps from the 1970s. The set is made in France and unique and has a sophisticated appearance. The beautiful black shades give ...
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Mid-20th Century French Mid-Century Modern Table Lamps
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Midcentury Barovier & Toso Murano Glass Lamp
By Barovier&Toso
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Midcentury Barovier Toso Murano glass lamp. Glittery pale pink translucent glass and antiqued brass hardware. Lamp shade not included. Harp add...
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Vintage 1960s Italian Hollywood Regency Table Lamps
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