Marilyn Monroe’s Personal Lamp

An Intimate Domestic Artifact Reflecting Marilyn Monroe’s Private Life

From the Estate of Marilyn Monroe, an early twentieth century table lamp constructed of solid brass and weighing more than twenty six pounds. The lamp features a circular base adorned with draped swags and anthemion ornamentation, supporting a tapering stem detailed with patera and opposing bellflower motifs. Its paneled shade is framed with pierced beaded latticework, reflecting classical decorative influences characteristic of the period.

This lamp was used within the joint offices of Marilyn Monroe Productions and photographer Milton Greene, both located at 480 Lexington Avenue in New York City. During the formative years of Marilyn Monroe Productions, the space served as both business headquarters and creative studio. When Marilyn and Greene ended their professional partnership, the lamp remained with Marilyn and was later used in her New York residence.

On March 8, 1955, Marilyn was interviewed inside the offices of Marilyn Monroe Productions. Photographs taken that day by Milton Greene document the occasion, and this very lamp is visible behind her in those images, offering clear photographic confirmation of its presence within her working environment.

Category:
Personal Possessions
Item:
Lamp Personally Owned and Used by Marilyn Monroe
History:
From the Offices of Marilyn Monroe Productions
Provenance:
Christie’s
The Personal Property of Marilyn Monroe
October 1999

Collector’s Note

This lamp stood not on a film set, but in the working offices of Marilyn Monroe Productions, the company Marilyn created to take control of her career. Objects such as this remind us that she was not only a performer, but also a producer and strategist.

Visible in period photographs taken inside the Lexington Avenue offices, the lamp serves as a quiet witness to meetings, negotiations, and decisions that reshaped her professional life. After her partnership with Milton Greene ended, she chose to keep it, carrying it from her office into her New York home.

Preserved today, it represents the physical environment in which Marilyn Monroe asserted independence and built her legacy beyond the screen.

Scott Fortner

Marilyn Monroe Collection
Founder & Owner

@mariylnmonroecollection

TheMarilynMonroeCollection

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