Torchère, one of a pair

Minneapolis Institute of Art

Torchère, one of a pair

Designer: Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse

Date
c. 1862
Medium
Silvered and gilt bronze, black onyx bases, red marble placques
Department
European Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

These free-standing gas lights (or a similar pair) were chosen to represent French design at the International Exposition of 1862 in London. Forty years later, they were purchased from a Paris dealer for the new home of Louis W. Hill (1872–1948), a prominent businessman and the son of St. Paul railroad magnate James J. Hill. Louis Hill’s house, built in 1903, was furnished as lavishly as his parents’ famous mansion next door, which at the time of its completion was the most expensive house ever built in Minnesota. These elegant torchères at first welcomed guests to the foyer and later were moved into a ballroom added to the house in 1912. They remained in the family until a daughter donated them to Mia in 1974. France, Europe

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