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Pflueger Chandeliers from the Metro Theatre, San Francisco

Several years ago, we had the rare opportunity to acquire these magnificent pieces when the Metro Theatre was being repurposed. They were later sold to an important collector and have now returned, ready for a new home. We are pleased to share that they have been purchased by a special client who will reinstall them in a beautifully restored theater here in San Francisco, where the public will once again be able to admire these creations by renowned architect Timothy Pflueger.

This pair of chandeliers, removed from the historic Metro Theatre on Union Street in San Francisco, represents a unique chance to acquire original fixtures connected to the city’s golden era of movie palaces. The Metro Theatre, first built in 1924 by Samuel Levin, was dramatically redesigned in 1941 by Otto Deichmann and Timothy Pflueger, two of the Bay Area’s most important architects and designers of the period. Both were central figures in the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition on Treasure Island, even appearing together in Diego Rivera’s celebrated mural created for the fair.

Timothy Pflueger on the far left side holding a blueprint in Diego Rivera’s mural Pan American Unity

Pflueger’s influence is especially visible in these chandeliers: his hallmark combination of metal and etched glass, already seen in his commissions for the Paramount, Castro, and Alameda Theatres, is fully expressed in their bold, streamlined forms. His well-known practice of controlling every architectural and decorative detail is unmistakable here.

Measuring an impressive 48 inches wide by 60 inches tall, these fixtures are monumental examples of San Francisco’s mid-century theater culture. The two chandeliers are both in excellent condition. Their provenance is beyond question because ArtDecoCollection owner Richard Fishman personally supervised their removal during the Metro’s later renovations, ensuring their preservation and documenting their full history.

Shown in the accompanying images, including their last installation in our Oakland showroom, they stand as rare survivors of a vanished chapter in the city’s cultural life. For a serious collector, preservationist, and institution undertaking a restoration project, these chandeliers offer a rare opportunity to own pieces tied directly to Pflueger’s vision and to San Francisco’s architectural legacy.

Timothy Pflueger remains one of the most celebrated architects of San Francisco’s Art Deco and Moderne period, with theaters like the Paramount, Castro, and Alameda standing as landmarks of design innovation.

His fixtures were never secondary details but carefully conceived elements of a total vision, and surviving examples outside of their original interiors are extremely scarce. These Metro Theatre chandeliers, with their documented provenance and impressive scale, provide a tangible link to the golden era of Bay Area movie palaces and the creative energy of the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition.

Left: Art Deco San Francisco: The Architecture of Timothy Pflueger by Therese Poletti, Right: Click here to view our artist page on Timothy Pflueger

If you are interested in further stories of Art Deco design, collecting, and celebrating the artistry of early 20th Century:

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