Rare Salviati & C. ‘Cherub’ Filigrana Glass Bowl 1859-72

£140.00 $174.40 Product Code: 2021061308

Technical Description 

Spiral ‘polychrome filigrana’ glass bowl from the Venetian glass manufacturer Salviati & C, produced under the ownership of Dr Antonio Salviati. Decorated with spiraling pulled bands of opaque white in combination with amethyst and copper aventurine. Two winged ‘cherub masks’ are applied either side of a turned, footed form. Rough pontil and slag seed material, consistent with its age.

Date & Origin

Island of Murano, Italy, c1859-72.

Condition 

Excellent, no chips, cracks or restoration.

Dimensions 

Height: 5.7cm Diameter: 10.3cm. 

Comments

An exquisite example, this piece exhibits early Salviati & C. patterns in both decoration and form, as attributed by the Murano Glass Museum, Venice. View those three examples here: Cherub bowl - https://bit.ly/35XxMyq Beaker pattern - https://bit.ly/3hhrXAZ Decanter pattern - https://bit.ly/3dnvU6b

Further investigation reveals that the ‘cherub dish’ is documented as pattern 601 among 1 of 23 watercolour and ink papers held in the MET Museum. These papers are stamped “Compagnia di Venezia & Murano - Venezia - Vetri e Musaici” (Company of Venice and Murano - Venice - Glass & Mosaic) and show a variety of early glassworks including mirrors, chandeliers and goblets. View here: https://bit.ly/3y9kqv8

The papers seem to be a finely curated collection of best works, indicating that this dish was included for exhibition as a stand-alone object. As Salviati & C. was renamed Venice and Murano Glass and Mosaic Company Limited in 1872, it would follow that this is a pattern list from their first International Exhibition held in Vienna in 1873 where they won 13 prizes for decorative arts.

Antonio Salviati left the company to re-establish his artistic vision in 1877 and by the Paris exhibition of 1878 focus had shifted to replicating roman murrine glass, certainly by the Milan exhibition in 1881, the Company of Venice and Murano had moved onto their show-stopping display of the first of its glass phoenixes. None of which is included within these 23 watercolour pages leading us to a most probable production date of between 1859 and 1872 while under the name of Salviati C.

This technique is known as polychrome filigree, a type of fused trailing that was first revived around the 1840’s most notably by the likes of Pietro Bigaglia and Lorenzo Graziati.

Sometimes termed “latticino,” named for the combination of milk (lattimo) glass threads fused in crystal (cristallo). This specific technique is more modernly referred to as “filigrana” (filigree) or pulled trailing.

 

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