Late 20th Century American Five-Arm Chandelier













Late 20th Century American Five-Arm Chandelier
It’s the kind of fixture that makes you look twice.
At the center, a compact hub sends out five short arms, each ending in a small hook. From those, five longer arms suspend downward, creating a layered, almost architectural composition that feels both engineered and improvised.
Each drop terminates in what convincingly reads as a gas fitting—pierced metal galleries, tight proportions, all the cues of early American lighting—now quietly electrified and fitted with softly glowing opaline globes. The effect is immediate: warm, atmospheric, and just a little deceptive.
Here’s the twist—it isn’t antique! Made roughly 30 years ago, it channels the late 19th-century transition from gas to electric with remarkable fluency. Convincing enough to fool a trained eye, which says everything.
What holds it together is restraint. One down rod, one central hub, a precise interplay of radiating and suspended arms. It doesn’t mimic the past—it edits it, and lands somewhere sharper.
19 in. DIA x 65 in. H