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French 19th Century Porcelain and Bronze Electrified Oil Lamp by Gagneau & Co

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  • Pair of 19th Century Electrified Porcelain Oil Lamps.
    Located in Fairfax, VA
    Pair of hand painted porcelain table lamps with bronze base and hardware. These lamps are professionally rewired with double...
    Category

    Antique 19th Century French Table Lamps

    Materials

    Porcelain

  • 19th Century Oxidized and Dore Bronze Electrified Oil Lamp
    Located in Fairfax, VA
    19th century dark brown, glit bronze oil lamp that has been professionally electrified and fitted with box pleat silk lampshade. 3way socket, up to 250watts.
    Category

    Antique 19th Century French Empire Table Lamps

    Materials

    Marble, Bronze

  • 19th Century Electrified Bronze Candlestick Lamp
    Located in Fairfax, VA
    19th century bronze candlestick that has been electrified as table lamp and fitted with silk lampshade.
    Category

    Antique Late 19th Century Table Lamps

    Materials

    Bronze

  • 19th Century Electrified Bronze Onyx Table Lamp
    Located in Fairfax, VA
    Onyx and bronze from 19th century oil lamp that has been electrified with 2 pull chain sockets and fitted with black lampshade. Professionally rewired.
    Category

    Antique 19th Century French Table Lamps

    Materials

    Onyx, Bronze

  • French Electrified Bronze Empire Oil Lamp
    Located in Fairfax, VA
    Bronze empire oil lamp has professionally rewired with double pull chain socket and fitted with hardback lampshade. Measurement includes the lampshade.
    Category

    Antique 19th Century French Empire Table Lamps

    Materials

    Bronze

  • French 19th Century Bronze Candlestick Lamp
    Located in Fairfax, VA
    French 19th century electrified bronze candlestick lamp fitted with box pleat silk lampshade.
    Category

    Antique 19th Century French Table Lamps

    Materials

    Bronze

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  • 19th Century French Bronze and Pottery Hanging Oil Lamp by Gagneau
    By Gagneau Paris
    Located in New York, NY
    Unique 19th century hanging oil lamp by Gagneau and Company of Paris, with urn form crafted from faience with blue, red and pink flowers and leaves on a cream colored ground, with ne...
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    Antique Late 19th Century French Chandeliers and Pendants

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    Bronze

  • Maison Gagneau, Pair of Lamp in Guilloche Gilt Brass, Late 19th Century
    By Gagneau Paris
    Located in Saint-Ouen, FR
    Maison Gagneau, signed. Pair of baluster shape lamps in guilloche gilt brass. They stand on a circular base. The collar is circled with a silvered ring...
    Category

    Antique 1880s European Table Lamps

    Materials

    Brass

  • 19th Century French Bronze Porcelain Hurricane Oil Lamp
    Located in Guaynabo, PR
    This is a hurricane oil lamp made of bronze and porcelain. It depicts a cylindrical shaped porcelain font hand painted with a light pink background embellished by some flowers and a ...
    Category

    Antique 19th Century French Art Nouveau Table Lamps

    Materials

    Bronze

  • French Porcelain Oil Lamp, Electrified
    Located in Buchanan, MI
    Good looking 19th century French oil lamp electrified. Great color with bronze mounts.
    Category

    Antique 19th Century French Table Lamps

    Materials

    Bronze

  • Pair of Porcelain Vases Ormolu-Mounted in Lamps by Gagneau Paris XIXth Century
    By Gagneau Paris
    Located in Saint-Ouen, FR
    Pair of large Japanese Porcelain Cone Shape Vases with Imari decoration Important mounts in ormolu and gilded metal, the base decorated with a laurel wreath, the upper part of falling leaves and a frieze of knotted ribbon. The mounts signed Gagneau, 115 R. Lafayette. Circa 1860 With their original aluminium bulb cover and original gilding Vase it self Height 47 cm The Gagneau Company is one of the most famous lighting factories in Paris in the nine-teenth century, established in 1800 at 25 rue d'Enghien in Paris and later at 115 rue de Lafayette. She has participated in many exhibitions throughout this century. She began in 1819 with the Exposition des Produits de l'Industrie and later participated in the Universal Exhibitions where she was part of the jury in the category of art bronzes (class 25) at the Universal Exhibition in Paris in 1889. "Imari" was simply the trans-shipment port for Arita wares, from where they went to the for-eign trading outposts at Nagasaki. It was the kilns at Arita which formed the heart of the Japanese porcelain industry. Arita's kilns were set up in the 17th century, after kaolin was discovered in 1616. A popular legend attributes the discovery to an immigrant Korean potter, Yi Sam-Pyeong (1579–1655), although most historians consider this doubtful. After the discovery, some kilns began to produce revised Korean-style blue and white porcelains, known as Early Imari, or "Shoki-Imari". In the mid-17th century, there were also many Chinese refugees in northern Kyushu due to the turmoil in China, and it is said that one of them brought the overglaze enamel coloring technique to Arita. Thus Shoki-Imari developed into Ko-Kutani, Imari, and later Kakiemon, which are sometimes taken as a wider group of Imari wares. Ko-Kutani was produced around 1650 for both export and domestic market.Kutani Ware is characterized by vivid green, blue, purple, yellow and red colors in bold designs of landscapes and nature. Blue and white porcelain pieces continued to be produced and they are called Ai-Kutani. Ko-Kutani Imari for the export market usually adopted Chinese design structure such as kraak style, whereas Ai-Kutani for the domestic market were highly unique in design and are ac-cordingly valued very much among collectors. Ko-Kutani style evolved into Kakiemon-style Imari, which was produced for about 50 years around 1700. Kakiemon was characterized by crisp lines, and bright blue, red and green designs of dramatically stylized floral and bird scenes. Imari achieved its technical and aes-thetic peak in the Kakiemon style, and it dominated the European market. Blue and white Kakiemon is called Ai-Kakiemon. The Kakiemon style transformed into Kinrande in the 18th century, using underglaze blue and overglaze red and gold enamels, and later additional colors. Imari began to be exported to Europe when the Chinese kilns at Jingdezhen were damaged in the political chaos and the new Qing dynasty government halted trade in 1656–1684. Ex-ports to Europe were made through the Dutch East India Company, and in Europe the des-ignation "Imari porcelain" connotes Arita wares of mostly Kinrande Imari. Export of Imari to Europe stopped in mid-18th century when China resumed export to Eu-rope, since Imari was not able to compete against Chinese products due to high labor costs. By that time, however, both Imari and Kakiemon styles were already so popular among Eu-ropeans that the Chinese export porcelain copied both, a type known as Chinese Imari. At the same time, European kilns, such as Meissen and English potteries such as Johnson Bros. and (Royal) Crown Derby, also imitated the Imari and Kakiemon styles. Export of Imari surged again in late 19th century (Meiji era) when Japonism flourished in Europe.Thus, in the western world today, two kinds of true Japanese Imari can...
    Category

    Antique 1880s French Japonisme Table Lamps

    Materials

    Bronze

  • French Bronze 19th Century Converted Oil Lamp
    Located in Tarrytown, NY
    Neoclassical bronze converted oil lamp. Also looks great without the bulb as an object.
    Category

    Antique 19th Century Table Lamps

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