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VAN BRIGGLE Art Pottery Tall Pair-Candlesticks Art,Crafts, Mission Era 1920-26

$ 158.4

Availability: 68 in stock
  • Material: Clay
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Style: Art Nouveau Stickily Inspired set!
  • Manufacturer: Van Briggle
  • Original/Reproduction: Antique Original 1920-26
  • Color: Mulberry w/a Dark Blue Dusting
  • Object Type: Candle Stick Set
  • Condition: One is perfect, one has a very small craze line that was fixed so well we never saw it until taking these pictures!! Still incredibly beautiful and in great shape for their rarity & age!! Gorgeous 10.5 inches tall with a 6 sided hex top 2.5 inches and a 6 sided base of 5.5 inches, makes these huge, rare & beautiful set!

    Description

    Van Briggle Pottery was founded in Colorado Springs in 1901 by a husband-and-wife team (well, not technically, since Artus and Anne didn’t marry until 1902) who had been decorators for Rookwood Art Pottery Company, in Cincinnati, Ohio. The most prized Van Briggle pieces are pre-1910, with “AA” (for Artus and Anne) incised on their bottoms. Because Van Briggle used molds for its pieces, production was able to continue long after Artus’s death in 1904. The acclaim accorded Van Briggle was almost instantaneous. The same year he founded his pottery, Van Briggle took first prize at a show in Paris. The Louvre paid a whopping ,000 for the winning piece of a male nude wrapped around the opening of a vertical vase. Titled “Despondency,” the piece would become one of Van Briggle’s most famous vases. In fact, Van Briggle is probably best known for its vases. The “Lorelei” vase, also from 1901, is like a female version of “Despondency,” while “Lady of the Lily” from the same year depicts a female nude leaning against an enormous calla lily. Figurative and floral motifs were a mainstay of the company’s visual vocabulary, although the pottery also produced a number of jugs, whose sides were populated by spiders and spider-like decorations. One of the other hallmarks of Van Briggle was its luscious satin matte glaze. Hues ranged from Turquoise Ming (still produced today) to a maroon glaze called Persian Rose, the rarer but popular Mulberry Glaze and the really rare Mulberry w/a Dark Blue Dusting, supposedly a color, style commissioned by Gustav Stickily (Not verified!)
    Van Briggle was also highly regarded for its architectural tile, which decorated fireplace hearths, chimney tops, and wall fountains. After some ownership changes in the 1910's, Van Briggle regrouped and continued to produce tall and squat Art Nouveau vases with philodendron, iris, and other floral motifs. Animal figurines became an important part of the company’s line, be it as purely decorative objects and modestly functional ones—Elephant Bookends, Tiger, Horses, also Candlesticks, re-issued Vase's that were popular in the early 1900's up until the mid 1920's.