42
Handel
USA, circa 1912
Table Lamp, shade no. 5889
Estimate: $4,000-$6,000
Sold
$6,000
Live Auction
Artist and Artisan: Fetcher House and the Collection of James G. Hansen
Location
Chicago
Size
Height overall 23 x diameter of shade 18 inches.
Description
Handel
USA, circa 1912
Table Lamp, shade no. 5889
obverse and reverse painted chipped glass, patinated metal
shade marked 'Handel 5889' to interior, stamped 'Handel' on metal shade ring, and base stamped 'Handel' to underside.
Height overall 23 x diameter of shade 18 inches.
Property from the Estate of James G. Hansen at Fetcher House, Winnetka, Illinois
This lot is located in Chicago.
Condition
In overall good and ready to place condition. There are no breaks, losses or repairs to the glass shade. The base and shade may not be an original pairing, but both are marked "Handel." The base with acorn pulls that do not function when pulled, but the lamp is functioning electrically when plugged in. Even tarnish throughout the base. One small 1 inch patch of rubbed and exposed copper to the base. A few small areas of lighter flecks to the lamp base. Very slight areas of scratching to the lower surface consistent with handling and placement. Please see additional images.
Signature
shade marked 'Handel 5889' to interior, stamped 'Handel' on metal shade ring, and base stamped 'Handel' to underside.
Provenance
Provenance:Artists Forum, Pacific Grove, California, October 3, 2000Literature:De Falco, Robert, Carole Goldman Hibel, and John Hibel, Handel Lamps: Painted Shades and Glassware (New York: H&D Press, Inc., 1986), 56.Note:The Fetcher House in Winnetka, Illinois was designed by local architect Augustus Higginson and built in 1901 for Edwin S. Fechheimer (who later changed his last name to Fetcher). Higginson was a Winnetka resident and member of the Chicago Arts and Crafts Society at Hull House and was therefore the ideal architect to design Fetcher’s home in the desired Arts and Crafts style. In April 1905, The House Beautiful featured the home, praising the architecture and interior design as “simple, sincere, and unpretentious.” [1]Over the following century, there were several additions and renovations to the home as it passed through three owners before James Hansen purchased it in 1979. Hansen was a passionate and knowledgeable collector, who valued and preserved the history of The Fetcher House. As an artist and industrial designer himself, he had a deep appreciation for the Arts and Crafts movement for its creation of beautiful, functional objects made from natural materials as a reaction against mass production.Hansen built his collection to fit the style of the home including striking examples of works by important early 20th century makers such as Tiffany Studios, Roycroft, Stickley, and Grueby, as well as Chicago metalsmiths Robert Jarvie and Jessie Preston. Freeman’s | Hindman is honored to present this eclectic and inspired collection in our Early 20th Century Design auction on May 20, 2025 and Artist and Artisan: Fetcher House and the Collection of James G. Hansen auction on June 6, 2025.[1] Robie, Virginia, “A Bachelor’s Cottage in the Country,” The House Beautiful (April 1905), 30-31.