Over the years, the following books have focused on the designs of Handel lamps: Joanne Grant's
The painted lamps of Handel (c. 1978); De Falco, Hibel & Hibel's
Handel lamps: Painted shades and glassware (1986); Carole Hibel's
The Handel lamps book (1999); and Robert DeFalco's
Metal overlays by Handel (c. 2000). Handel Company lamps were also included in Martin May's
Great art glass lamps: Tiffany, Duffner & Kimberly, Pairpoint, and Handel. As of 2016, lamp designs by the Handel Company are in the following museum collections:
Brooklyn Museum;
Corning Museum of Glass; Museum of American Glass in Millville, NJ;
Tucson Museum of Art; and the
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. Over the years, Handel lamps have been exhibited in the 1889 Delavan Opera House exposition in Meriden and the 1915 Industrial art exhibition at the National Museum (Smithsonian) in Washington, DC. Handel lamps have been shown and assessed on the
Antiques Roadshow TV program. In 2008, a Handel Company "fine and rare elk lamp" (c. 1917) was sold at
Sotheby's in New York for US$85,000 in its "20th century design" sale. ==References==