Atlas & Arden
Art Deco Ceramic Candleholders — Pair, Verdigris Matte Glaze, 1920s–30s
Art Deco Ceramic Candleholders — Pair, Verdigris Matte Glaze, 1920s–30s
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These weren't made to match your dining table. They were made to anchor it.
A matched pair of American Art Deco candleholders in a matte verdigris glaze that looks like it was borrowed from a copper dome and fired into clay. The stepped base and scrolling fleur-de-lis brackets give them a quiet architectural authority — the kind of weight and proportion that comes from a period when even functional objects were designed to hold a room.
Sourced at the Brooklyn Flea, these are unmarked, but the glaze, form, and construction are consistent with American art pottery of the 1920s and '30s. The green is not bright or decorative — it's the subdued, mineral tone of something that was always meant to age well. And it has.
Use them as-is on a mantel, a console, or a long table. Or don't use candles at all — they stand on their own as sculptural objects.
Origin: American Era: 1920s–1930s Material: Glazed ceramic Glaze: Matte verdigris green Sold as: Pair
Dimensions:
Height: ~3.5–4"
Base width: ~4.5–5"
Condition: Good vintage condition. One holder has a small glaze chip on the side. General wear consistent with age. No cracks or structural issues. Solid.
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