Classical Greek Floor Lamps
There is rare surviving furniture from ancient Greece, yet this classical style has informed design for centuries. Interiors of houses in antiquity were minimal, with much of a room’s color coming from frescoes on the walls and mosaics on the floors. Classical Greek furniture was sparing but finely crafted and influenced by Egyptian furniture design through Mediterranean trade.
Furnishings of the period were usually made from local wood like cypress, cedar, oak and willow from ancient Greece’s plentiful forests, although some pieces were carved from marble, such as a 300–200 B.C. throne with lion legs and a curved back now at the Getty Villa. Comfort and clean lines characterized designs during the Classical era, the symmetry and thoughtful proportions reflecting the architecture of Greek temples.
Some pieces of ancient Greek furniture were simple, rectangular platforms like the klinē, a multipurpose ancestor of today’s couches or daybeds that held cushions stuffed with wool, dry grass or down. These structures were used for both sleeping and dining, which wealthy Greeks did while reclining. At night, oil lamps illuminated rooms that frequently surrounded a garden courtyard.
Most of what scholars have learned about Greek furniture design owes to its representations in art like vases and stelae. The portable diphros stool, with its backless design and four turned legs, was one of the more common types of seating in daily Greek life — it appears as such for the gods on the Parthenon frieze. Stools without backs have been found in early Roman tombs, while benches were also common Greek seating furniture created for use in theaters. In houses of the Hellenistic period, benches seemingly functioned as tables, too.
Some designs evolved through adaptations by the Romans, including the klismos chair. After prominent archaeological excavations at Pompeii and Herculaneum, the klismos chair — with its four saber legs and the elegant curves that define its back — was a source of inspiration for aesthetics in eras ranging from 18th-century neoclassicism to 20th-century Art Deco.
Find a collection of Classical Greek decorative objects, wall decorations and building and garden elements on 1stDibs.
19th Century French Antique Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Marble, Bronze
1980s American Vintage Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Nickel
20th Century American Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Resin
Early 2000s American Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Metal
1970s French Vintage Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Metal, Bronze
2010s Italian Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Marble, Brass
1970s American Vintage Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Wood, Paint
1980s American Vintage Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Bronze
1980s American Vintage Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Silver Leaf
1970s American Vintage Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Plaster
21st Century and Contemporary French Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Wrought Iron
21st Century and Contemporary American Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Metal
Mid-19th Century European Antique Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Bronze
1940s French Vintage Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Wrought Iron
20th Century American Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Bronze
1960s French Vintage Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Brass
Early 20th Century Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Brass
1970s French Vintage Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Metal
1960s American Vintage Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Plaster
Early 20th Century Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Early 1900s Danish Antique Classical Greek Floor Lamps
1970s Italian Vintage Classical Greek Floor Lamps
Wood