The Piece
A beautifully preserved early postwar table lamp, dating between 1942 and 1949, and built during a pivotal moment in American design. This piece blends the final echoes of Art Deco with the streamlined calm of emerging modernism, creating a lamp that feels sculptural, warm, and quietly elegant.
The body is a smooth ovoid ceramic form with a soft, semi-translucent glaze—simple, clean, and intentional. It sits on a brass bell-shaped base that anchors the silhouette with a gentle flare, a profile common in 1940s boudoir and transitional modern lighting. The lamp’s original hardware is a perfect time capsule: a stamped-metal Leviton socket and a Berger harp marked with the 1942 patent (U.S. Pat. No. 2,270,497), a detail that securely dates the lamp to the mid-1940s.
Viewed today, the lamp reads as functional sculpture—minimal, warm, and character-rich. Paired with a neutral contemporary shade, it works seamlessly in vintage, mid-century, eclectic, or modern organic interiors.
Design & Construction
→ Form & Style
A transitional 1940s form, defined by:
• Rounded ovoid ceramic body with soft glaze variations
• Brass bell-shaped base with gentle, Deco-influenced flare
• Vertical, balanced proportions suited for nightstands or side tables
• Hardware that reflects early modern American industrial design
The piece bridges prewar curves with emerging postwar simplicity.
→ Materials
• Glazed ceramic body
• Cast or spun brass-plated metal base
• Stamped Leviton metal socket (250W / 250V)
• Berger swivel harp (Patent 2,270,497, issued 1942)
• Newer shade (not original), compatible with the lamp’s proportions
Every component reflects the durable, American-made materials of the 1940s: steel, brass, ceramic, and simple utilitarian hardware.
→ Technique
• Ceramic body wheel-thrown or mold-cast, then kiln-glazed
• Base formed via casting or spinning, finished with brass plating
• Leviton socket mounted on threaded metal rod
• Patented 1942 Berger harp attached with original collar
• Rewired at some point in its lifetime, as expected for lamps of this age
The combination of Berger and Leviton hardware is a hallmark of U.S. domestic lighting from the WWII and immediate postwar era.
History & Provenance
This lamp was produced between 1942 and 1949, a period shaped by material shortages, wartime resource restrictions, and a design landscape transitioning from ornament to pure form. Lighting manufacturers like Leviston assembled lamps using ceramic bodies from pottery suppliers, metal bases from regional foundries, and Leviton sockets—the leading American electrical component maker at the time.
The presence of the Berger patented harp (U.S. Patent 2,270,497, filed in 1940 and granted in 1942) confirms the lamp’s earliest possible production date. Its design reflects both necessity and refinement: simple materials, restrained shapes, and a focus on practicality elevated by subtle sculptural form.
Today, lamps from this era are increasingly collectible for their authenticity, craftsmanship, and compatibility with modern interiors.
Condition
Excellent vintage condition with:
• Clean ceramic body with minimal age wear
• Brass base showing even, attractive patina
• Fully functional Leviton socket
• Original 1940s Berger harp intact
• Rewired cord (safe for modern use)
• Shade is a later addition and not original to the piece
A well-preserved example of early postwar American lighting.
Product Details
| Attribute | Description |
|---|---|
| Item | Leviston Ceramic & Brass Table Lamp |
| Date | c. 1942–1949 |
| Maker | Leviston Lamps (assembly); hardware by Leviton & Berger |
| Material | Ceramic, brass-plated metal, steel hardware |
| Style | Transitional Deco → Early American Modern |
| Condition | Excellent vintage; rewired |
| Color | White ceramic glaze, aged brass base |
| Use | Bedroom, living room, side table, office accent |
Why It Belongs in Your Home
This lamp brings quiet history and sculptural presence into any space. Its ceramic form and brass base create a warm, organic silhouette that complements both vintage and modern interiors. With authentic 1940s hardware and a smooth, refined body, it offers:
→ genuine WWII-era provenance
→ timeless, clean-lined design
→ warm patinated brass character
→ effortless pairing with modern shades
→ a collectible piece of American lighting history
Simple, elegant, and full of soul, it’s a lamp that feels both classic and contemporary.