a wall lamp, variant of model "HD 24", Orrefors, 1920s-30s.
Shade in amber-tinted glass with neoclassical decoration of a female figure, silver-plated metal mount. Height 43 cm.
Wear and patina, a few chips at the inner edge, a small number of minor chips elsewhere, rewired.
The shade model illustrated in the Orrefors archive, dated 1927.
Edward Hald was a Swedish visual and glass artist born in Stockholm. He studied at the business school in Leipzig, the Artists' Association School, and he also was a student of Henri Matisse in Paris. Hald's artistry in the 1910s exhibited a modernist spirit, inspired by the Fauvist Matisse. Hald designed decorations for various models and services for Rörstrand Porcelain Factory as well as for Karlskrona Porcelain Factory. Edward Hald contributed these works to the Home Exhibition in 1917 at Liljevalchs in Stockholm and was hired by Orrefors Glassworks the same year. Together with Simon Gate and glassmaker Knut Bergqvist, he experimented with overlay glass, resulting in Graal glass. The Graal technique was entirely new and revolutionary. Hald's designs for both engraved and Graal glass display Matisse-inspired elements, humor, and contemporary motifs.
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