ABOUT US

Formed in 2019 through the merger of two highly respected international organisations — The Glass Circle and The Glass Association — The Glass Society is a vibrant global community for anyone passionate about historical and contemporary glass.

The Society is committed to encouraging and promoting glass collecting and research. It offers members enriching opportunities to connect socially, expand their knowledge and delve into the history and manufacturing of glass. These opportunities are provided through a variety of resources, including the quarterly magazine Glass Matters, the biennial Journal, lectures, organised tours and visits.

To further these objectives, The Society also offers grants and bursaries.

Membership is open to all, including individuals, corporate members and associated societies, across the UK and around the world.

1937

Foundation of The Circle of Glass Collectors.

1960

Name update from The Circle of Glass Collectors to Glass Circle to reflect a wider audience and interests.

1983

Foundation of The Glass Association with regional branches throughout England.

2019

Launch of The Glass Society through the merger of The Glass Circle with The Glass Association.

1937

Foundation of  The Circle of Glass Collectors.

1960

Name update from The Circle of Glass Collectors to Glass Circle to reflect a wider audience and interests.

1983

Foundation of The Glass Association with regional branches throughout England.

2019

Launch of The Glass Society through the merger of The Glass Circle with The Glass Association.

The Glass Circle

1937 to 2019

The Circle of Glass Collectors was founded by John Maunsell Bacon in May 1937. He was a contemporary of many of the pioneers of scholarship of English glass such as Joseph Bles, Grant Francis, Wilfred and Francis Buckley, Albert Hartshorne, Arthur Churchill and W.A Thorpe. Formal meetings, at which full evening dress was worn, were held in the London homes of several leading collectors to which new members were officially invited by a sponsor.

Notes of the meetings were kept and printed in duplicate form for members. Until the 1960s the Circle’s focus was confined to 18th century and earlier English drinking glasses. From this point onwards it became known as ‘The Glass Circle’ and it widened its interests to cover glass from antiquity to the present day. It met monthly – in recent times at the Art Workers Guild in central London – at which papers were read by members or guests, with the objective of presenting original research on the whole breadth of the subject of glass.

From 1972 these were included in the first of eleven Journals, published over a number of years. It also published a quarterly unillustrated newsletter, Glass Circle News, which later became a full-colour magazine. Visits to museums both at home and overseas played an important part in the Circle’s more recent history.

During the lifetime of the Circle, it held several exhibitions of glass of which the first, in 1962 at the Victoria and Albert Museum, commemorated the 25th anniversary of its inception. This was later followed by that in 1987, Strange and Rare, at the glass museums in Stourbridge and St. Helen’s, which celebrated the Circle’s 50th anniversary. Its last exhibition, From Palace to Parlour, A Celebration of 19th Century British Glass, was held at the Wallace Collection in 2003.

The Circle also held symposia at the V&A on Judging Jacobite Glass (1996) and another on Glass Collectors and their Collections (1999). With members spread internationally, the Glass Circle was considered the foremost society in the United Kingdom devoted to the study of glass. During the postwar years it was chaired by two of the world’s leading specialists, firstly from 1937 until 1957 by W.A. Thorpe, succeeded by Robert J. Charleston until his retirement in the early 1990s, both Keepers of Glass at the Victoria and Albert Museum and leading international scholars. Subsequent chairs include Simon Cottle, John P. Smith and Susan Newell.

 
 

The Glass Association

1983 to 2019

Following discussions about the need for a glass society based on the regions, between Ian Wolfenden of the Museums Studies Course at Manchester University, Charles R. Hajdamach of Broadfield House Glass Museum and Dudley Art Gallery and a handful of glass collectors, the Glass Association was founded in the autumn of 1983. Its intention was that members would attend lectures and meetings virtually on their doorstep rather than having to travel to London for meetings at the Glass Circle. The notable glass collector Tony Waugh, from Wolverhampton, enthusiastically agreed to support the idea and became its first Chairman.

Many glass collectors, institutions and academics were members of both societies. It was informally agreed that the new association would deal mainly with British 19th and 20th century glass whilst the Glass Circle would stick to its well-trodden formula of 18th century and earlier glass. Rules were drafted by a newly-established committee, printing costs for newsletters were obtained and a programme of events was suggested. On 5th December 1983 the inaugural meeting was duly held in the glass department at Stourbridge College of Art with demonstrations of glassmaking.

There were five regional groups in England: in the North-West, the North-East, the Midlands, the South-West and the South-East including London. Members from wherever in the country could attend all or any meetings. Various events were organised, from ‘show and tell’ sessions, lectures often given by notable international glass historians, to home and overseas visits which included the United States, Venice and the Czech Republic, the latter in conjunction with the Glass Circle.

The Association published a quarterly newsletter entitled The Glass Cone which included short articles, news and reviews. The first issue was published in March 1984. This was followed by The Journal, issued every two years which contained longer articles and photographs, covering the history of glass in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and the occasional article on 18th century glass. It became a valuable resource for glass collectors. Volume 10 from 2004, for example, printed the entire photographic record from the only surviving catalogue of 20th century Gray-Stan glass.

The Chairmen of the Association were Tony Waugh, John Delafaille, Ian Turner, Charles R. Hajdamach, Brian Clarke and David Willars; the last two being instrumental in the discussions with the Glass Circle about the two societies joining forces. The Glass Society was subsequently established.

Officers of The Glass Society

The Glass Society would not be where it is today without the dedication and enthusiasm of our volunteers who work tirelessly to promote and support the society.

As a registered charity, we have a Board of Trustees who set strategic direction and priorities for the society, while an Executive Committee undertakes its day-to-day operation.