Gasolier

Description

This gasolier is a light fixture named for its original light source, gas, which had a flickering affect that would have been amplified by the hundreds of glass pendants and the twelve etched glass shades affixed to the intricate brass frame. Decorative metalwork flourished in the late 19th century with the rise of Aestheticism, a cultural movement that prized beauty in every aspect of life, including one’s furnishings. Here sprays of flattened flowers and stylized branches and leaves form the structural elements of the gasolier including the circular tiers and angular brackets that support the glass elements.

Provenance

Purchased by Frederick Wood Dye (1856–1920) and Florence Julia Cole Dye (1857–1936) about 1880; given to a Dayton, OH, girls school about 1880; returned to Florence Julia Cole Dye in the 1920s; by descent to Georgiana Marie (Dye) Malone (1882–1962), 1936; by descent to Dorothy Ann (Dye) Griffin (1923–2015), 1962; given to John Theodore Dye (born 1927), 1972; sold to Allen’s Antique Lighting, Harvard, MA, 2010; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2018.

Gasolier

Thackara, Buck & Co.

c. 1880

Accession Number

241409

Medium

Brass and glass

Dimensions

147.3 × 124.5 × 124.5 cm (58 × 49 1/16 × 49 1/16 in.)

Classification

furniture

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Roger and J. Peter McCormick and Jane and Morris Weeden endowment funds