Pair of twin-branch cut glass Wall Lights by Perry & Company
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Pair of twin-branch cut glass Wall Lights by Perry & Company
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Pair of twin-branch cut glass Wall Lights by Perry & Company:
with tall centre notch-cut glass spire on dentil-cut urn; the rope-twist branches bearing ‘acanthus’ cups and pans each side of a scroll; dressed with graduated festoons of ‘double star’ prisms and pear-shaped pendants. Circa 1860-80, restored.
Height: | 27½" | - | 70.0cm |
Width: | 15½" | - | 39.0cm |
Projection: | 10½" | - | 27.0cm |
Glossary Words
cut glass
Often now referred to as 'crystal', the glass was blown and shaped, then passed to a specialist cutter, who would polish and cut patterns to enhance its brilliance.
Perry & Co
William Perry opened a shop at 72 New Bond Street in 1817 as Glass Manufacturer to the Prince Regent. The firm continued under different ownerships until the Depression of 1930. Perry produced a range of magnificent chandeliers, generally suitable for palaces. During the second half of the nineteenth century, at least, their name was linked with a particular kind of chandelier. It featured long, slender stem-pieces centring on an urn-shaped section, with generous double-ogee canopies above and a similar shaped dish inverted as a receiver bowl for the branches. Arms were normally rope-twist, often with moulded drip pans. There were seldom glass candle cups, merely a short tube with a saveall. The chandelier would be profusely dressed with graduated festoons of 'double-star' prisms and English 'pear' pendants, often alternating with clear spheres, and below, a faceted, pointed finial. They closed in 1921.
festoon
A hanging garland of prisms or flowers.
'double star' prisms
Round cut-glass prisms with star-cuttings on both sides. One of the finest of prisms, generally used on Regency and later chandeliers by Perry & Co.
English 'pear' pendant
Pear-shaped cut-glass pendant with a facetted front and pointed star back.