Murano Glass Lamp, Peach Glass with Gold Aventurine and Foliate Decoration (mid century)
Description
This is a classically-shaped peach-colored Murano glass lamp decorated with a gold aventurine pattern throughout and applied foliate detail at the top. We believe it is from the middle of the last century. Recent Murano glass designers describe that era as a time when "the Italian avant-garde found a kinship with the country’s deep handmade traditions.”
Details
- Italy, c. mid century
- 15 1/2" tall glass base, 19 1/4" to top of socket, 6 1/2" diameter
- Recently rewired with brass hardware and mounted on a new lucite base
- Lamp shade, harp and finial not included
- Excellent condition with some oxidation to hardware
About Murano Glass
Venice has been a center of glass making for centuries. It wasn’t until the 13th century that glass making was moved to the island archipelago of Murano by decree to protect the wooden structures of Venice from the fire hazard caused by the furnaces used in the process. The isolation of the production facilities also allowed the Venetians to closely guard their production secrets and innovations. Eventually, their secrets escaped and England and Bohemia became prime competitors. This competition, coupled with political upheaval in Italy, led to the decline of the Murano glass industry.
As explained in a recent NYTimes T magazine article, "it wasn’t until after World War I that the industry once again found its purpose, reborn as 'art glass.' Murano wares of the later Middle Ages had been either optically clear (a style called cristallo) or pale (lattimo), featuring curlicues and frippery, but in 1921, a Milanese lawyer named Paolo Venini bought a glass operation with the Venetian antiques dealer Giacomo Cappellin, convincing artisans to focus on clean lines and saturated hues like violet, sapphire, cranberry and emerald. In 1932, Venini hired Carlo Scarpa, a then 26-year-old Venetian who would later become one of Italy’s most important architects. Scarpa, who was soon joined by a young Gio Ponti, another future Italian design legend, would help create the lexicon and shapes we now think of as Murano: frosted ribbing on translucent orbs, volcanic colors, corroded effects that resemble distressed wood or iridescent fish scales. Murano glass from that era remains coveted by collectors and designers..."
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