-40%
Small Vase Soliflore Pâte de Verre Emile Galle Orchids New Art 19th
$ 397.04
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Description
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Small glass paste soliflore vase *, signed Gallé **, with acid-free decoration of orchid flowers on a purple-yellow background, from the Art Nouveau period at the end of the XIXth-beginning of the XXth centuries.
This vase is in good condition. It is signed on the side.
A note: slight soiling, small manufacturing defects (visible on the neck and on the body), tiny micro-chips on the bottom (almost invisible), slight wear of time,
see photos.
*Molten glass :
treatment of glass known from Antiquity (Pliny), rediscovered by H. Cros around 1880, who was looking for a fusible material that could be worked in a pasty or liquid state. It is a colored crystal, previously reduced to powder and mixed with water, added to a binder to compose a paste; this after cooking becomes hard and translucent to be then modeled like a sculpture and colored. The real glass paste is removed by cold amalgamating glasses and crushed enamels. The dough is then molded and subjected to baking in a lost wax mold; under the effect of heat the constituent elements agglomerate. (Larousse dictionary of antiques and second-hand goods).
* Émile Gallé
(1846-1904) is a French industrialist, master glassmaker, cabinetmaker and ceramist. He was the founder and first president of the École de Nancy in 1901. A child of art and commerce, he was one of the most prominent figures in the applied arts of his time and one of the pioneers of Art Nouveau.
Diameter
: 5.5 cm / collar 1.8 cm
Height
: 9.8 cm
Reference:
F20 46
*Molten glass : treatment of glass known from Antiquity (Pliny), rediscovered by H. Cros around 1880, who was looking for a fusible material that could be worked in a pasty or liquid state. It is a colored crystal, previously reduced to powder and mixed with water, added to a binder to compose a paste; this after cooking becomes hard and translucent to be then modeled like a sculpture and colored. The real glass paste is removed by cold amalgamating glasses and crushed enamels. The dough is then molded and subjected to baking in a lost wax mold; under the effect of heat the constituent elements agglomerate. (Larousse dictionary of antiques and second-hand goods). * Émile Gallé (1846-1904) is a French industrialist, master glassmaker, cabinetmaker and ceramist. He was the founder and first