PRODUCT DETAILS
| Dimensions en CM | 47.5 x 47 x 86 cm |
|---|---|
| Dimensions en INCH | 18.70 x 18.50 x 33.86 inch |
| Période | 1940–1950 |
| Matériaux | Gilded Metal |
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
The term “beaten” — the translation of the French martelé — describes a technique in which the surface of the metal is worked with a hammer to create an irregular, subtly textured finish entirely distinct from the smooth, uniform surface of cast or pressed work. On the gilt surface of this lantern, the martelé treatment creates a play of light that no smooth surface could replicate: each facet of the hammered metal catches the illumination differently, so that the gilt surface appears almost to shimmer, its texture changing as the observer moves or as the light shifts. This quality distinguishes martelé work from ordinary gilded metalwork in the way that a handwoven textile differs from a machine-made one.
The four lights — set within the generous body of the lantern (forty-seven centimetres across, eighty-six centimetres in height) — are enclosed behind curved glass panels. Curved glass is a technically demanding material: unlike flat glass, it must be shaped under heat in a specialised process, and the consistent curvature across multiple panels of matching dimensions is a test of the glassmaker’s skill. In a lantern of this age and size, the survival of the curved glass panels in original condition is itself a point of distinction. Together, the four light sources animate the interior of the lantern with a warmth and depth that simpler constructions cannot achieve.
A lantern of this scale — nearly a metre in height and nearly half a metre across — belongs to the category of objects conceived for grand spaces: the entrance halls of châteaux and hôtels particuliers, the staircases of manor houses, or the vaulted corridors of institutional buildings of the first rank. Four-light lanterns of this quality in original condition are rarely encountered; they are objects made to last and to impress, and which, when found, represent an exceptional opportunity for the collector or interior decorator seeking a centrepiece of genuine authority.
SIMILAR SELECTIONS