Candlestick Base with Interlacing Dragons

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 199


Conical inlaid-brass candlesticks were a common form of luxury lighting from Egypt to Anatolia in medieval times. Many later appeared on the art market via Cairo, once the capital of the Mamluk sultanate (1250–1517) that ruled Egypt and Syria. This example features a central zigzag band decorated with pairs of winged dragons, symbols of potency and protection. While Moore might not have understood the significance of the imagery, his artistic eye was surely attracted to the finely executed details and the polychrome accents.

Candlestick Base with Interlacing Dragons, Brass; inlaid with silver and copper

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