candle holder

candle stick VON LATT, male

lavish gold staffage

6.500,00€

In the spring of 1900, the sculptor Hans Latt (1859-1946) designed two table candelabra with herms in the neoclassical style. The two two-armed candelabra with female and male figure originally formed an ensemble with a table clock. Hans Latt worked in Rome from 1883 to 1885 and was influenced in his artistic work by the sculptures and buildings of antiquity. In 1886, he returned to Berlin and devoted himself to architectural sculpture, relief sculpture

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candle stick VON LATT, male 6.500,00€
candle stick VON LATT, male lavish gold staffage
6.500,00€
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History

designer: Hans Latt year: 1900 material: porcelain

The "herms as candelabra" candlesticks are iconic masterpieces. In the spring of 1900, the sculptor Hans Latt (1859-1946) designed two table candlesticks with herms in the neoclassical style. 

Product details

article number
436231-06
wide
360mm
length
130mm
height
540mm
Suitable for dishwashers Suitable for microwaves Hand-painted Hand-printed 24k gold Bright platinum

Product description

Product description

In the spring of 1900, the sculptor Hans Latt (1859-1946) designed two table candelabra with herms in the neoclassical style. The two two-armed candelabra with female and male figure originally formed an ensemble with a table clock. Hans Latt worked in Rome from 1883 to 1885 and was influenced in his artistic work by the sculptures and buildings of antiquity. He returned to Berlin in 1886 and devoted himself to architectural sculpture, relief art and portraiture. 

He created several models for the Königliche Porzellan-Manufaktur Berlin. The female figure , wrapped in a cloth, is depicted as a semi-nude and holds a mirror in her right hand. In ancient culture, the mirror was regarded as an image of the soul, and the hand mirror of Venus is still known today in stylized form as a symbol of femininity. The male counterpart, with a cloth draped over his shoulder, carries the fasces in his left arm, a bundle of rods that was carried in front of the ruler by the lictors as a symbol of office in Roman antiquity. 

Both figures and the heads attached to the sides of the candlestick base are not glazed in order to better emphasize the intricacies of the sculptural work. Fluted brass candlestick arms are attached to either side of the figures, on which the glazed porcelain spouts, which are shaped like calyxes and decorated with a gold rim, are mounted.

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