The Glass Cone

ISSUE NO.107

SUMMER 2015

Contents

1 Who Made that Glass?

6 Visit to Isle of Wight Glass Studio, 2014
7 Timothy Harris and Isle of Wight Studio Glass
9 Visit to Frauenau with BGF

12 Crested Glassware

14 Art In Action: Britain’s top craft show!

16 Cutting Edge

17 Musee des Arts Decoratifs: Paris Exhibition

19 The Engraved Glass of Franz Tieze
23 Starting a Glass Collection

24 Letters from Harry Powell

25 Gray-Stan: Luxury Modern Glass 1926-1936
26 Visit of American Paperweight Maker Jim Brown

26 Book Reviews

29 Members News

29 What’s on. Your guide to exhibitions and other events

Chairman’s message

The Glass Cone

THE MAGAZINE OF THE GLASS ASSOCIATION
Issue No: 106 – Spring 2015

Editor: Brian Clarke [email protected]

Editorial Board
Brian Clarke, Bob Wilcock

Address for Glass
Cone
correspondence

E-mail [email protected]
or mail to Glass, 7 The Avenue, London N3 2LB

E-mail news & events to [email protected]

Articles and news items are welcome at any time,
but please bear in mind the copy dates if you have

an event you would like to be publicised.

The opinions expressed in the
Glass Cone
are those

of the contributors. The aim of the Editorial Board is to

cover a range of interests, ideas and opinions, which

are not necessarily their own. The decision of the
Editorial Board is final.

Copy dates
Spring: 15 February – publication 1 May

Summer: 15 June – publication 1 September

Winter: 1 October – publication 1 January

Advertising rates
Full page £200; Half page £140; Third page £100;
Sixth page £70; Twelfth page £55. For inside back

cover and back cover, prices are on application.

Discounted rates for GA members

Please contact [email protected]

The Glass Association 2015. All rights reserved

Design by Malcolm Preskett
Printed in the UK by Warners (Midlands) plc

Published by The Glass Association

ISSN No.0265 9654

The Glass Association
Registered as a Charity No.326602
Website: www.glassassociation.org.uk

Life President:
Charles Hajdamach

[email protected]

Chairman:
Dr Brian Clarke

[email protected]

Hon. Secretary:
Judith Gower

[email protected]

Membership Secretary
Pauline Wimpory,150 Braemar Road, Sutton Goldfield,
West Midlands, B73 6LZ

[email protected]

Committee
Nigel Benson; Paul Bishop (Vice-Chairman); Christina

Glover; Alan Gower; Jordana Learmonth; Zsuzsanna

Molnar; Kari Moodie; Malcolm Preskett; Rebecca

Wallis; Bob Wilcock; Maurice Wimpory (Treasurer)

Membership and subscriptions
Individual: £25. Joint: £35. Student with NUS card: £15.

Institutions: UK £45. Overseas £35. Overseas

Institutions £55. Life: £350. Subscriptions due on
1 August (if joining May-July, subscriptions valid until

31 July, the following year)

Cover illustrations
Front:
Decanter, London (UK), probably George

Raverzscroft at the Savoy glasshouse, 1680.

By permission of the V&A, viewed at the

GA study day.

Back:
Piggin and Bowl. Waterford cut glass

about 1830. From the collection of Mary Boydell.
(see article — p.19)
A large part of my message in

Glass Cone

106
dwelt on discussions between the GC

and ourselves, which at the time had come
to a close. There were some stumbling
blocks which will need to be ironed out

between us in the next year or so. Under

my chairmanship and perhaps beyond, the
conversation will continue, looking forward

to a vibrant future under one umbrella, for

the collectors, researchers, curators and

lovers of glass.

We are delighted to welcome new,

enthusiastic and committed members to

the Glass Association (GA) Committee.

Zsuzsanna Molnar, who with her partner

Attila Sik have been introducing Hungarian
Glass sculpture to the UK (see their ‘Cutting

Edge’ article), is able to use her event

management skills to join with David Willars

(invited to the committee) in organising this
year’s AGM at Warrington — a new venue for

the GA; I hope to see many of you there.
Kari Moodie, Keeper of Glass and Fine Art

at Broadfield House has written a review of
the trip to Frauenau, a hopeful introduction
to the new glass museum in Stourbridge;

Kari has also introduced BHGM’s Gray-
Stan exhibition (complete catalogue on our
website). Together with Rebecca Wallis,

curator of Ceramics and Glass at the V&A,
who’s been at the centre of our very

successful study days at the V&A, we have

a motivated and strengthened committee.
Sally Haden’s article continues her research

into the assistance the UK gave to Japan

in forming their glass industry, while Nigel

Benson has unearthed letters from Harry
Powell, one of which is presented with a

reference to Mrs Graydon Stannus. Bob

and Ruth Wilcock continue to cover their
`glass travels’ and I’m delighted to

welcome Neil Chaney and Sonia Jackson

as new contributors.
Aware that our membership is based

throughout the country, we’ve been holding
events to appeal to everyone. We began
with a visit to The Higgins Art Gallery and

Museum in Bedford in March, then June at

the V&A, followed a few days later with the

Association of History of Glass day event
at the Wallace Collection; July has just

seen us at Station Glass at Shenton in
Leicestershire. Coming in September we

have an event at Moreton in Dorset, with
October holding our sixth visit to The
Georgian Glassmaker’s in Quarley and then

our AGM in Warrington. Read ‘What’s On’

for all events and two trips abroad in 2016.
Looking forward to another year of

interesting and educational activities.

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

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Who Made that Glass?

Identifying Victorian glassmakers and manufacturers:
James Speed (1834-1908)

Sally Haden

fig.1: Photograph

taken in 1883 of

glassmakers at the

Shinagawa Glass
Works, Tokyo.

Sitting at centre

left is James Speed,

their British

instructor.

Reprinted by courtesy
of Meijimura Museum

AVE you ever taken down a

piece of glass from your

collection and held it in your

hands for a few moments to pause
and wonder about the moment of its
creation? To think of the glassmaker
beside the furnace on that day,
sweating, calling for something to

slake his thirst? What was his name?

Who taught him? Were there many
children at home to feed and clothe?

Was he born locally or in another
country? You ask and ask, but there

is no answer from your vase or bowl.

You look and look, but the secrets
of

its making are locked away forever

in impenetrable silence.
I do not have a glass collection,

but in 2005 I was shown a photo-

graph
(fig.1)
which made me ask a

lot of questions and prompted me to
unlock a family mystery. For there

amongst many Japanese workmen
was my great grandfather, James

Speed, a man about whom I knew
very little except for the intriguing

family story that he had gone to
Japan to teach glassmaking. For me

the photo was an instant, unbidden

and inescapable invitation from my

ancestor to me, to become a glass

historian and tell his story. But the
quest has not been an easy one.

My family kept no personal artefacts

or papers that would have helped,

and at some crucial points in his
life he just disappears from view in
the archives.

I

It was from Japan that the first

and most useful information came,
with the group photograph.
,

I learned

that Speed and three other British
glassmakers had been invited to

help bring modern western-style
glassmaking to Japan during the

early Meiji era. A full history of

the factory where they worked, and
its background in Japanese history,
can be found in my article in the
2013 edition of the

Journal of the

Glass Association.
But in outline,

before the country was forcibly

opened in the 1850s by western
powers after more than two centuries

of self-imposed closure to the outside
world, Japan had subsisted in

feudalism, largely ignorant of Europe’s

many advances. A sudden encounter
with the West was both a shock and

an awakening. The Japanese fell

instantly in love with steam trains

and democracy, modern navies and
schools, science and factories …

and so much more. They resolved
to modernise, but on Japanese

rather than foreign terms wherever
possible. The thousands of foreign

experts – a large proportion of them
British – who were engaged to assist

in turning the country around worked
on time-limited contracts, after

which they had to go home.
The four British glassmakers each

worked for one to four years at a
glassworks in Shinagawa, Tokyo,

between 1874 and 1883. The factory

had been constructed initially for the

purpose of making window glass

and ships’ red signal glass – two
products much needed as the
country modernised. Thomas Walton’s

assistance from 1874 to 1878 was
described in
The Glass Cone

numbers 102 and 103, as part of this
series ‘Who Made That Glass’. This

article relates the tale of my ancestor,
James Speed, who replaced Walton

at Shinagawa in 1879.
In keeping with the way that glass

objects cannot inform us about the

moment of their making, Speed’s
origins are obscure. In the family we
knew he was Scottish, but from

where? Before she passed away,

my aunt told me our ancestor was

fathered illegitimately by a member
of the Scottish aristocracy, a

Buccleuch. But when he was born

– around 1834 or 1835 – birth
registration was not compulsory and

I searched for a birth certificate in
vain. The baptism did not come to

light either, so I fell back on other

records. Archives for Glasgow,
where he was raised, told me that

Speed’s ‘father’ (so described by the
1841 census) took whatever basic
labouring work he could find, and his

mother and sisters sometimes
‘worked’ the streets, later becoming

familiar with the insides of both the

THE
GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

1

fig.2: Engraving of

Chance Brothers
factory, Smethwick,

near Dudley,

about 1860.
The glass for the

Crystal Palace was
made here, by the

‘new’ or Belgian

blown cylinder
method.

city’s poorhouse and its gaol. This

was not an auspicious start to life

and Speed may have never known
much about his true origins.
So how can we account for his

appearance in Edinburgh in the late
1850s as a talented glass craftsman,

soon to be a glassworks manager,

and later to rise to much responsi-
bility in Japan? Even getting into the
trade was difficult, without a relative

to open the door or provide some
other foothold. One possibility is

that Speed was sponsored by the
Freemasons — his 1859 marriage
certificate shows a connection — or

perhaps he was somehow helped
by his blood father.
2
In 1866 he

followed Donald Fraser, a Leith flint

and window glass manufacturer, out
of Edinburgh to Bathgate in West
Lothian, where Fraser set up a high-

quality flint glassworks with Speed

as his manager.
3
Then, by 1879 he

was at Japan’s first truly western-

style glass factory in Shinagawa,

Tokyo, in charge of many trainees.
Of these three leaps, the last is

the most remarkable and needs
explanation. What was he doing
before Japan? How did he hear

about the opportunity? Did he
undertake any special preparation

for it? Again, direct information is
missing but there are certainly some
interesting clues.

Speed’s work in Japan was

immediately preceded by nearly
seven years in the English town of
Dudley, where his house was very
close to Victorian Britain’s most

advanced window-glass factory,
Chance Brothers in Smethwick,

Birmingham
(fig.2).
This coincidence

is fascinating, and deepened by
the equally fascinating visit to that

factory made by some important
Japanese gentlemen in November
1872, just around the time that

Speed left Bathgate.
This was the Iwakura Embassy, an

extraordinary group of high-ranking
Japanese government ministers who

had arrived in Britain from America
on an intercontinental tour. Their

mission was to research all areas
of western industry, government,

economy and education for what
could be useful in Japan. In his letter
presented by the Embassy to the

American President, the Emperor of
Japan said his country’s ambition
was to ‘stand upon the same footing

as the most enlightened nations’.
4

Their four-month British itinerary
included leading glassworks.
As described in my previous

articles, when Japan first opened up
there was a great thirst for everything

western. One of the items on the

Embassy’s shopping list was

window glass and the means to

make it at home, for it was in great
demand in Japan as traditional

architecture in the cities gave way to
brick buildings with paned windows.

The government believed that sheet
glass would bring prosperity to the
nation. Japanese glassblowers did

not know how to make it and the
economy was being drained by its

import, mostly from Belgium.
5
Since

their first visits to western nations

in the 1860s, the Japanese had
been in awe of structures like the

Crystal Palace, made possible by
the ‘new’ Belgian cylinder method

of window glassmaking. Chance
Brothers was currently famous for

its contribution to Victorian archi-
tecture and had made the glass for

the Crystal Palace
(fig.3).
Hirobumi

Ito, Japan’s Minister for Public
Works, kept J.T. Chance very busy
with questions when the Embassy

called there. Just before departing
for the Continental leg of their tour in

December 1872, Ito stopped off
for discussions with his friend

Hugh Matheson of Matheson & Co.,
London, the agent for Japan’s
Ministry for Public Works. It is
thought likely that Ito left him
instructions for the sourcing of
glassmakers for his country.
The Embassy was the ‘talk of the

town’ wherever it went during its
long tour of Britain, through news-
papers and within specific industries.

Its interest in glass must have
been noticed by manufacturers who

wanted to expand their exports, but

also by some glass workers. What
better for a man who fancied a well-

paid adventure in the ‘backward’ but

exotic Far East?
However, while the pace of

Japanese modernisation was very

fast once it got underway, schemes
took time to take shape on the
ground. Although the initial idea

for the glassworks at Shinagawa
probably emerged late in 1872, while

the Embassy was in Britain, it would
be another two and seven years

respectively before Walton and

Speed arrived to begin work. At first

the project may have looked
straightforward to the Japanese

businessmen who set it up — the
manufacture of window glass and

ships’ red signal glass, employing a

team of four British men to instruct

Japanese glassblowers. Confident
of healthy profits, a site was obtained

and construction began in the
summer of 1873.
But this was no easy task. Costs

escalated alarmingly and —
as a

result, I would suggest —
the first man

2

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

came alone, Thomas Walton in

1874. Despite Walton’s experience

and hard work over the next two

years, the furnace was problematic,

there was no success with sheet
glass and the business fell into

unsustainable debt. Because of the

factory’s value as a model for the glass
industry, the government took it over

in 1876. Under nationalisation and a

new name — Shinagawa Glass Works

— it was to restart window glass,

continue with ships’ signal glass and

train many Japanese glassmakers
in a wide variety of western glass-

making. It was only after Walton
had left in 1878 that James Speed
began his term.
The sequence of known facts

suggest the possibility that Speed
knew about the Japanese initiative

from the beginning and was invited

to receive some short training by

Chance Brothers before joining
three other men (perhaps to include

Walton) at Shinagawa in 1874.

Further research is needed but
Shinagawa’s initial woes, especially
running out of money, would have

disrupted such a plan. Speed

migrated from Scotland, where he

knew the Walton glassmaking

family, sometime between April 1871
and May 1873, to a home near

Chance Brothers in the Midlands.
6

The Iwakura Embassy made close
enquiries at Chance Brothers in

November 1872, and spent some time

in Scotland too. Japanese research

indicates that the glassworks’ owners,

new to the world of business, rushed
incautiously into the project.’ Was
their lack of good business acumen
one reason why Speed had to
wait until 1879 before he could sail

to Japan?
How did he support his large

family in the meantime? Chance
Brothers had various departments

but if he did not work there, oppor-

tunities surrounded him. Castle Foot

flint glassworks (much like Bathgate)

was only a few minutes’ walk from

the Speed family home, and a range
of flint factories lay further south,
down towards Stourbridge. Another

possibility — in keeping with the fact

that he gave much instruction in
Japan — is that he became a

Mechanics Institute teacher.
fig.3: The transept

facade of the

original Crystal
Palace, 1851.

With thanks to

Wikimedia Commons
Whatever the history, by the time

his turn came around in 1879,

Speed was about forty-five years of
age and a mature glassmaker with

plenty of skills and experience. He

had been both a maker and a

manager, and received a good wage
in Japan. Contracts that survive from

the other men, and Japanese
records, show that the pay was

many times what they could earn in
Britain, and their passages and basic
accommodation were covered by
their employers. The wives back

home received regular payments
deducted from wages, although in

Speed’s case his eldest children
were already out at work, so the

family in Dudley would have been

comfortable during his absence.
Speed was certainly able enough

for the job at Shinagawa. Soon after

he began, a Japanese newspaper
reported that he was more sophisti-
cated in terms of manufacturing

technique than his predecessor’.
8

fig4: Brush

holders made at

Shinagawa

glassworks and
exhibited at the

Second Industrial

Exposition of
1881, Tokyo. Flint

glass, heights:
168mm and

148mm. The slip

trails illustrate

Speed’s efforts to
bring western

colours and style

to Japanese

glassmaking.

With thanks to Tokyo

National Museum

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER
2015

3

Kaisha (Japan Glass Company) but

the factory itself became known as
‘Little Shinagawa’ because it was

so closely modelled on that at

Shinagawa. The main produce
was bottles and ships’ signal glass
but tableware and other items were

made
(fig.5).

Japanese records say

that in 1883 Speed gave instruction

to thirty glassmakers before he left

for home
(fig.7).

The date of his

departure is unknown, but presumed

to be after a few weeks or months at

Ito’s factory.
Among the faces in the farewell

photograph of 1883
(fig.1)
is that

of a glassmaker who established a

large company in Osaka. Magoichi

Shimada trained with Speed at
Shinagawa and followed him to

Nihon Garasu Kaisha where he

became Ito’s manager. He estab-

lished his own Osaka factory in
1888, which stayed in Shimada

family hands through three gener-
ations. It led the field in Japan’s
domestic glassware in the 20th

century, making both common and

high-quality items
(fig.
6).
9
Today its

successor, Toyo-Sasaki Glass,

acknowledges Magoichi Shimada

and James Speed on its website.
1
°

Speed probably returned home

sometime in 1883, but his move-

ments then and in later years are
unclear. According to the censuses
of 1891 and 1901, the family lived

in Aston just north of the centre of
Birmingham, although it seems

Speed was occasionally called away
to other locations. The 1891 census
shows him lodging close to
Canongate, Edinburgh, a ‘glass-
maker’, perhaps working at Ford’s

famous Holyrood glassworks. He
seems to have continued working

until his death in Aston in 1908, aged

about 74.

What conclusions can be drawn

about James Speed? Shortage of
detail makes the task difficult, but his

actions and circumstances show a

man of courage, strength, stamina
and determination. If he liked

reading, he would have enjoyed

Samuel Smiles’
Self-Help,
an

enthusiastic Victorian classic which

encouraged people to be self-
taught, independent pioneers and
work hard.
11
Interestingly, the book

Under his management, pressing,

moulding, cutting and engraving
equipment was imported, also various
oxides for the many new colours that
were popular in western Victorian
glassware. Two extra British men

worked with him to give instruction:

a crucible maker named Elijah

Skidmore, and a Bohemian glass
cutter and engraver named Emanuel
Hauptmann. Their stories will be the

subject of later
Glass Cone
articles.

A new furnace was built and

Speed gave instruction to dozens of
trainees before the end of his work

there. At Japan’s Second Industrial

Exposition in 1881 nearly 300 items

were displayed, including glass

for pharmaceutical use or chemical
experiments, bottles, vases, table-
ware, ships’ sidelights, lanterns,

lamps, and stationery items
(fig.4).

Nevertheless, there was a big dis-

appointment. Speed’s efforts towards
the manufacture of Japan’s first
window glass were no more

successful than Walton’s. It was

a difficult technology to take into a
completely new environment and

trials failed again and again. In fact,

nobody in Japan was able to master
window glass until early in the 20th

century. Without profits from it, the

factory could not survive, so it was
closed in 1883 and put up for sale.

Although this was the end of British
influence at Shinagawa, Speed

and Skidmore were offered fresh
contracts by a Japanese glass

manufacturer in Osaka.

Keishin Ito opened his small

Osaka glassworks in 1875 after
studying chemistry, and must have
been watching developments in the

industry closely, for when Shinagawa
closed he invited Speed and many of

his apprentices to join him. Skidmore

had already moved there in 1881, at
which point Ito had fifty trainees. The

business name was Nihon Garasu
fig.5: Set of six

glasses made by
Nihon Garasu

Kaisha between
1883 and 1890.

Note the shell

handles, a design
which appeared

particularly in

1860s Edinburgh

when Speed

worked there.

Soda-glass,

engraved, height

10.4cm.

With thanks to Kobe

City Museum, Biidoro-

Shiryoko-Collection

fig.6: Shimada

Glass Works as

depicted in one of

its 20th-century

catalogues.

Reprinted, with thanks

to Y. Tsuchiya, and

T. Fujimori,
Glass of

Japan,
Shikosha

Publishing Co. Ltd,
Kyoto, 1987

4

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

fig.8: A bottle manufactured at the Shinagawa

glass factory between 1888 and 1892, for the Japan
Brewery Company founded by Thomas B. Glover

(later Kirin Brewery Co. Ltd).

Bottle dimensions: diameter 8cm, height 29cm.

Date of label1889.

With thanks to Ritsuo Yoshioka
of the Japan Uranium Glass Collectors Club

fig.7: James Speed,

from the farewell

photograph at the

Shinagawa
factory, 1883.

This portrait was

retained by

Magoichi

Shimada out of

respect for his

teacher.

His son wrote on it:

Meiji 12-16

(1879-83),

Shinagawa

Glassworks,

Mr. James Speed,

British, my father’s

teacher.’

Reprinted by courtesy

of the Shimada family

was highly popular in Meiji Japan

where the work ethic was – and

still is – very strong. He probably got

on well with people in Japan. A

Presbyterian by faith and Scottish by

birth, he is likely to have encountered
westerners in Tokyo and Osaka

much like himself, and the Japanese

were very respectful of Scottish

people because of the contribution

made to their country by Thomas B.
Glover from Aberdeenshire, a pivotal

figure in the development of Japan’s

modern economy.
Life could be dangerous so far

from home, on the very edge of
western imperialism, but Queen

Victoria’s subjects strode the
world’s stage with confidence. Their

monarch was, after all, ‘Empress
of India’ and the map of the world
was turning more red every year.

What could go wrong? Speed
appears to have met his challenges

with perseverance and resolve,

and certainly brought skills and
knowledge which helped many
Japanese glassmakers to improve

themselves. During the Meiji era,
Japanese glassmaking was trans-

formed from small-scale, high-value

production for local markets to

the mass manufacture of common

and industrial glass for home

as well as export, with new high-
quality products too.
Did he keep in touch with

Japanese people in later years?

He must have wondered what
became of glassmaking in Shina-

gawa and Osaka after his departure.

In 1885 the Shinagawa glassworks
came into the hands of Katsuzo
Nishimura, who installed a Siemens

tank furnace. He created the

factory’s first profits with bottles for

the Japan Brewery Company,

making about one million bottles

per annum
(fig.8).
Subsequently,

sheet glass was trialled again and

also again at Shinagawa and in other locations, until finally the Asahi Glass

Company made the country’s first
successful blown cylinder glass in

Osaka in 1909, just a year after

Speed’s death.
Osaka is now the centre of

Japan’s glass industry, and the
location of Nippon Sheet Glass’s

head office, Japan’s leading flat
glass company. Imagine if James

Speed were here today and learned
that this company, NSG, acquired
Pilkington plc in 2006 – a Japanese
glass manufacturer, which today

makes glass in 29 countries and has
sales in 130 countries around the
world, now owns Britain’s famous

flat glass manufacturer! He would be
very taken aback, astonished, and

maybe shocked, at how much the
world has changed, but also grateful

to have played a part in the
development of Japan’s glass

industry as it stepped forward so
boldly in the Meiji era.

The author would be pleased to
hear from anyone who is interested
in this subject at
[email protected],
or

www.hadenheritage.co.uk
REFERENCES

1.
A. Inoue, ‘A. British influence on the

Shinagawa Glssworks – Japan’s first industrial

glass factory.’ Ann. 16th Congr., AIHV, London

2003.

2.
Marriage of James Speed to Mary Ross

held at the Grand Lodge of the Scottish

Freemasons, Edinburgh, 1859, where Mary

and her mother were resident at that date.

3.
For an appraisal of the West Lothian Flint

Glass Works at Bathgate, see ‘The Bathgate
Bowl’ by Barbara Morris in
The Glass Circle,

2,

1975.

4.
Letter written by the Emperor of Japan to the

President of America. R.H. Brunton,
Building

Japan 1868-76,
p.117. Japan Library Ltd,

1991, Folkstone.

5.
For further details, see M. Chaiklin,

‘A Miracle of industry: the struggle to produce

sheet glass in modernising Japan’.
Building a

Modern Japan: Science, Technology and
Medicine in the Meiji Era and Beyond.
Ed.

M. Low, Basingstoke, 2005, pp.161-81.

6.
Census for Bathgate, April 1871 and birth of

Speed’s seventh child in May 1873 in Dudley.

7.
A. Inoue, ‘Kogyosha and Shinagawa

Glassworks (1) – The Establishment of the First

Western-style Glassworks in Japan’.
Glass,

J. Assoc. Glass Art Stud., 2009, 52, p.10-31.

8.
Tokyo Shinbun, 5 May 1879.

9.
For more details and photographs, see the

article in
Journal of the Glass Association,

2013.

10.
http://www.toyo.sasaki.co.jp/e/company/history.html,

accessed 6 June 2014.

11.
S. Smiles,
Self-Help.

http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/935

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

Visit to Isle of Wight

Glass Studio, 2014

W
E used to have relations

who lived on the Isle of

Wight and for many years

when
my
wife, Diana, was teaching

we were able to make use of their

hospitality during school holidays.

While on these visits we discovered
the delights of the various glass-

making establishments on the island.

These included Michael Rayner, who
started off on a very small scale as

Island Glass in Totland near Fresh-
water, later moving into Freshwater
before expanding and, with a change

of name to Alum Bay Glass, moving to the
Needles Pleasure Park above Alum Bay

where they can still be found today. The

other place that just had to be visited was,

of course, the Isle of Wight Glass Studio at

St Lawrence, Ventnor.

Sadly the relatives are no longer alive but

we continue to visit the island most years,

basically to take advantage of wonderful

walking rather than visiting the many

attractions on offer. One of our favourite
walks is to the Battery above the Needles,

returning along Tennyson Down to

Freshwater Bay, and on the way we can’t
really avoid the Needles Pleasure Park
complex. We normally pop in to see if they

are making anything new but these days

refuse to pay to see glassmakers at work.
Last September found us on the island

again and we knew that the new Isle of

Wight Glass studio at Arreton Barns Craft
Centre had reopened following the closure
Richard Giles

fig.1

of the facility at St Lawrence the previous
year, so on one of the days we decided

to forego a walk and pay a visit. By
coincidence the route from The Needles

end of the island to Arreton is ‘sort of on

the way to the Isle of Wight Steam Railway

at Haven Street, so the plan was to take in
both. For those interested in seeing

glassmakers at work, the craft centre

also houses another glassmaking
studio, Diamond Isle Sculptured

Glass, who, as the name would
suggest, make freehand sculptured
glass items in many ways quite
different to the wares produced at

the Isle of Wight studio nearby.
Fortunately when we arrived at the

studio Timothy Harris was making

glass and even more appropriately

making a new type of paperweight

(fig.1).
With the demise of the previous

business and having to start again in a

much reduced style at a new location,

Timothy Harris has been concentrating on
the manufacture of glassware for sale

rather than being able to indulge himself in

making the more complicated and unusual
pieces to which collectors had become

accustomed. Hopefully in time he will be

able to resume the making of such items.
The type of weight featured uses

powdered coloured glass laid out in the
desired pattern on a metal sheet
(fig.2).
The

powdered glass is then picked up in one go

with a gather of molten coloured glass

which will form the base of the finished

weight and is then worked into the recog-

nised paperweight shape
(fig.3).
The

weights that we saw being made and

shown in the picture of Timothy Harris at
work had a layer of gold leaf on the base

before application of the powdered glass

patterning which added a degree of extra

vibrancy to the colouring. Unfortunately

there were no weights of this type for sale

at the time so we chose the one with the
blue speckled base.
As previously, paperweights are only a

small part of their production range and

most examples of Isle of Wight Glass

weights that we have purchased in the past

have been the more unusual ones made by

Timothy Harris especially for collectors.

We have always liked their glass and over

the years probably should have bought

more, especially from the early days if
we could have got the pieces signed by

Michael Harris.

6

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

Jazz Nuvo Collection

Graal-42

Incalmo

Studio Glass by
Timothy Harris

Wave form
7

Timothy

Harris and

Isle of Wight Studio Glass

A
S

the eldest son of Michael

Harris, one of the originators

of the British Studio Glass

Movement and co-founder of Mdina
Glass in Malta and Isle of Wight

Studio Glass, Timothy Harris received
a double-edged legacy from his

father. If he chose to become a
glassmaker he would have ready

access to a studio and a successful
business — but there would also be

the prospect of lifelong father-son
comparison. However Timothy never
wanted to do anything else apart

from becoming a glassmaker. By the
age of thirteen, standing on a beer
crate and assisted by his younger
brother Jonathan (now a well-known

leading glass designer), he was able

to make small glass ‘ Diddybirds’.

His aptitude for working with hot

glass developed under his father’s

tutelage and, after completing a
college glassmaking course, in 1980

he returned to the Isle of Wight.

Within a few years Timothy’s talent,
technical innovation, commitment

and attention to detail enabled him to

take his place alongside the most
respected designer-makers in Britain.

A great accolade came when his

father announced: You are a better
glassmaker than I’ll ever be’.

Following their father Michael’s

premature death in 1994, Timothy

and Jonathan took over the reins
of the Isle of Wight Glass studio.
Jonathan moved on in 1999, and

Timothy continued with I.O.W. Glass
until its closure in December 2012.

He said: ‘I was hugely disappointed,
but circumstances change, and

I realised you can’t hold on to

`Passionate about the

art of glass’

Graal-2-2

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

The re-opening

of Isle ofWight

Studio Glass at

Arreton Barns in

October 2014.

Mark Hill ‘having

a go’ at glass
making under the

watchful eye of
Timothy Harris,

with his brother

Jonathan and
Richard Harris
(brother of the late

Michael Harris)

looking on.

something that has naturally reached

its end. What I’ve learnt is the

importance of staying in control,

having a clear sense of direction and
above all, keeping things as simple

as you can’. With backing from

many quarters, Timothy was able to
salvage much of what he wanted

from the old company and start
again. This meant taking a year out

from glassmaking to build a new
studio on the Arreton Barns Craft

Village site.
Now, over nine months since

commencing glassmaking in the

new studio, Timothy reflects on his
lifelong journey:

When an idea occurs to me, I let it
lie for a while and then pull it apart

technically, breaking it down into
steps from which I can approach

making the piece, though when

you take the gather from the
furnace, all those ideas may be
undone, but at the end of the day

I do like to have the last word!
Sometimes things are completely

beyond my control; colours can

sometimes interact together in

unpredictable ways, but I see

mistakes as stepping stones

along the road to achieving what

I do want or what I’m happy to
accept. Every piece of glass

needs to be better than the last
in whatever small detail. It has to

be a happy piece of glass, a

considered piece of glass,

and that’s what sets it apart.

Timothy Harris

at work

The future?
To continue to be innovative and
creative and to push the
boundaries of what I am able to
do with this material. At the end of

the day that just means making
beautiful pieces of glass and

selling them for a reasonable

price. If that happens, as far as I’m

concerned everything is going

along nicely!

The information and pictures of

Timothy’s glass has been provided
by Richard Harris. More about

I.O.W. can be found at
www.isleofwightstudioglass.co.uk

8

THE
GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

fig.1:

Frauenau

Glasmuseum
exterior

t,

r
ia
rr

-t

, J
r

fre

v

\ AfT111

\

,
/h

fig.2:

Glasmuseum

decorative wall

and entrance.

Visit to Frauenau

with

BGF

February 2015

F
RAUENAU is situated in the

‘glass corridor’, an area which

is steeped in glassmaking

history that runs from Eastern Bavaria
to the region of the Czech Republic
formerly known as Bohemia. Unlike
the glassmakers of Britain, who were

forced by King James I and VI to
switch their fuel source from wood

to coal resulting in widespread

migration and settlement in areas
such as Stourbridge, the Bavarian
glassmakers were able to remain in

the plentiful forests and continue
their tradition of making green
waldglas (forest glass) for centuries.

Despite its rural location and small
population, Frauenau was home to

several large glass factories and,

as the birthplace and home of Erwin
Eisch, one of the founding fathers of
the studio glass movement, its role

in the history of glass should not be
overlooked or underestimated. So it

should come as no surprise that the

town is also home to a fabulous

glass museum
(figs 1 and 2).

The museum was founded 40

years ago, in 1975, in the remains
of an old sawmill, by a group of

enthusiastic visionaries, comprising
Alfons Hannes, who held the
position of Mayor of Frauenau for

thirty years, Helmut Schneck and

artists Erwin and Gretel Eisch
(figs 3

and 4).
Ten years ago the museum

underwent an enormous renovation
Kari Moodie

and extension project that resulted
in more than ten times the original

display space, a large reception

area, a cafe, lecture hall, museum
store and temporary exhibition

space. The result is impressive and

interesting, yet understated.
The museum tells the worldwide

story of glass, from ancient origins to
contemporary art-form. The displays

are split into chronological ‘chapters’
with each phase of development

marked by a change in style of

presentation, colour-scheme, motifs

fig.3:

Erwin Eisch and

Kari Moodie.

fig.4:

Ian, Kari, Larry,

Lynn, Erwin,

Graham

at tea with the
Eisch family.

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

9

fig.5: entrance to museum

galleries etc.

fig.6.- early 20th C
display cases.

and physical features such as
glass thresholds with ‘archaeological’

remains of the period
(figs
5, 6, 7

and 8).

The ground floor displays cul-

minate in a circular area focusing
on the processes and equipment

found in the typical 19th or 20th-

century factory
(figs 9, 10 and 12) .

The museum owns an exceptional
studio glass collection which is
beautifully displayed across two

floors. Outside, in the gardens and

along the pathways leading to the

museum, there are glass sculptures

fig.8: mid 20th century glass display

fig. 7: Biedermeir display,

internal window.

fig.9: 20th C display cases.
fig.10: Modem display areas.

10
THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

fig.13: Frauenau

statue in glasss

garden.

fig.14: Frauenau

Glass Garden –
Ronald Fischer

Glassark IL

fig.15: (left to right): Graham Knowles (Chairman of the BGF), Karin Ruhl (Director of

Frauenau Glasmuseum), Lynn Boleyn (Secretary of the BGF), Brian Clarke (Chairman,

Glass Association), Ian Harrabin (Director of Complex Developments), Kari Moodie

(Keeper of Glass &Fine Art, Dudley MBC) and Larry Priest (Architect for BPN Architects).

(figs 13 and 14),

some of which invite

the viewer to interact with them.
Next door is a contemporary glass
gallery and shop, run by Erwin and

Gretel Eisch, and within the town
there are other glass shops and

studios
(fig.11).

Our hosts – Karin Ruhl (director),

Sven Bauer (curator) and Iveta

(administrator) – were extremely
generous with their time and a large
part of our visit was spent in
discussions over funding, staffing

and sustainability as well as facilities,
exhibition design and partnership
building. We are sincerely grateful

for the warmth of their welcome
and their willingness to share their
experiences with us.

What did we learn?

Know your story – never lose

sight of the story you are telling

(this was Karin Ruhl’s top tip);


Show off your assets, play to your

strengths and don’t try to
‘manufacture’ them;


Incorporate the building into the

displays – floors, walls, ceilings,

windows and outdoor spaces
can all play an active part in the

visitor experience;


Understanding the lighting

balance for glass displays, from
daylight to artificial light;


Incorporate artworks and

commissions into the building

and museum displays;

Explore all avenues for funding,

don’t be put off by potential
‘strings attached’;


People are the most important

asset – no matter how good your
displays and text panels are, they

can’t be beaten by a warm

welcome from a real person!

Thanks to Karin and her staff for
their hospitality, Brian for contacting

Karin at Glasmuseum Frauenau

and suggesting the visit and

arrangements, Graham and Lynn
of the BGF for organising and

funding the visit, Ian and Larry for
sharing their enthusiasm and
professional perspectives, and to

Dudley MBC for allowing me to take
part in the visit. It was definitely

time well spent!

KARI MOODIE is Keeper of Glass

and Fine Art at the Broadfield House

Glass Museum, Dudley Museums

Service.

fig.11: Brian

Clarke, Erwin

Eisch and Karin

Ruhl.

fig.12 (above

right): Space for

lecture and

discussion.

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

11

Crested

Glassware

Bill Millar

y
OU might expect the author of an

article in this magazine to be either

an expert or have wide experience

of their subject. In this instance neither

is the case. Over the past year I have
collected eight pieces of crested glass-
ware and have seen photographs of

another four, so my knowledge is slight.

I cannot find mention of them in any

textbook and all but one of a number of
glass-knowledgeable people admitted they

had never knowingly seen a piece. So in the
land of the blind . . . !
AOISIIIOII

You will have seen crested china — small

P

novelty items in white porcelain with a town

or institution crest. Crested china was a
popular holiday souvenir for 50 years from

the early 1880s until the early 1930s. They
were made by a wide range of British and

foreign makers — most notably Goss. They
came in a huge variety of shapes including

tanks, artillery pieces, bandstands, anvils,
lighthouses, chairs etc. An example is

shown at
fig.1 .
This is a three-handled mug

(4cm high) with the transfer-printed crest of
Milford Haven and hand applied gilding to

rim. The mug was made by Gemma in

Czechoslovakia and the mark points to it

being made after 1918. About 7,000

shapes have been recorded and when you

apply the different crests of all the resorts

and institutions the permutations must run

into tens of thousands and the total number
of pieces made into the millions. Having no

practical purpose these knick-knacks

would have spent their lives in a display
cabinet, which explains why so many are

still to be found at antique fairs and in

antique shops. This article is about their
glass equivalent.
Given that after 12 months of diligent

hunting I have only acquired eight examples
of crested glassware, the number of pieces

manufactured must have been very limited
indeed. Any conclusions drawn from such

a small number of items must be tentative,
especially as I have yet to track down any
documented information about these

pieces. This article is, therefore, intended to

proclaim their existence and ask readers if

they know anything about them. With your

help, it might then be possible to produce

a knowledgeable essay on the subject.
Torquay is transfer-printed. The rim and

base have been gilded.

Blackpool vase.
The orange vase in

fig.3
(6cm high) appears to be cased,

clear over orange, but could simply

be clear glass enamelled on the inside.

The top of the rim has been polished flat

and hand-enamelled in black. Destructive
testing would be needed to establish if it is
cased or enamelled inside but I would need

a second example before sacrificing one
to the advancement of our collective
knowledge. The white cartouche and
black lines are hand-enamelled. The

surround to the cartouche is decorated

with tiny clear glass beads. The coat of

arms for Blackpool is transfer-printed.

Folkestone, Gourock, Margate and

Weston-Super-Mare vases.
Given that it

took 11 months to acquire the first four

items, it is nothing short of miraculous that
these four vases in
fig.4
were all acquired

within the four weeks immediately prior to

writing this article. They all came from

different sources. During the same four

weeks a 5th vase, with a similar shape and

decoration, was seen on an on-line auction

site but was not bought as it was essentially

a variant of those already acquired.

The four vases basically have the same
decoration as the Reading mug so it may

be presumed they had the same source.

In addition, the crests have all been hand-
coloured over a transfer-printed outline

although the quality of the workmanship
is variable. The Gourock vase (5.7cm high),
the Folkestone vase (5.2cm high) and the

Margate vase (9.2cm high) have identical
decoration to the Reading mug. The

Margate vase has a broken pontil mark to
the base. The Weston-Super-Mare vase

(5.8cm high) does not have the blue spots
seen on the other three vases. Rather it

has three hand-painted sprigs of violets.

Other examples

FOUR other examples have been seen for
sale in on-line auctions. They comprise:

Margate 1.
A vase of similar shape to the

Weston-Super-Mare vase and identical
decoration to the Reading mug.

fig. 1: Crested china three-handled mug with

crest forMilford Haven.

Examples of crested glassware

ENOUGH of the negatives, let us look at the
examples and establish a few facts.
Figs 2,

3 and 4
are photographs of the eight items

collected. It is worth describing them in

some detail to establish how they were
produced.

Reading Mug.
The miniature mug in
fig.2

(7cm high) is made of clear glass and has

been partially painted with white enamel

which was then decorated with tiny pale
blue spots. The coat of arms of Reading was
transfer-printed and all the other decoration,
including the gilt latticework on the upper,
clear section of the bowl was hand painted.

The intersections of the latticework have

applied enamel spots and the swags

around the top of the white background

have been hand-enamelled over a gilt
shape. The ground rim and the outer edge

of the handle were then gilded freehand.

Great Yarmouth jug.
The ruby jug in
fig.2

(6.5cm high) is handmade. It has a broken
pontil mark and the top of the bowl was

cut with shears and it has an applied clear

glass handle. The coat of arms of Great

Yarmouth was hand-enamelled over a

transfer-printed outline and the rim of the
mug has been gilded.

Torquay vase.
The red vase in
fig.

3 (8.1cm

high) is made of clear glass which has been
enamelled inside. The white cartouche and
black embellishment and edging is hand-

enamelled although the coat of arms for

12

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

fig.2: Crested glass mugs with crests for Reading and Great Yarmouth.

fig.3: Crested glassware with crests for Torquay and Blackpool.

Margate 2.
A tall spill vase with a white

cartouche with transfer-printed crest.

The body is peach and pale blue with

black lines separating the colours.

Margate
3. A small yellow glass vase

with white enamel cartouche and transfer-
printed crest. A black ladder border
around the top of the vase has white
enamel spots in each square and the rim

has been gilded.

Weymouth.
A milk glass spill vase (18.6cm

high) with transfer-printed crest and spray
of foliage tied with a ribbon.

Tentative and speculative conclusions
Given the limited number of pieces
involved, conclusions must be tentative

but it is safe to assume that they were

produced to compete with crested china.

From the examples above it is clear that the
production and decoration process was

complex and labour intensive.
In comparing the glass and china items,

the most striking difference is that the

former demonstrate colour and complex
decorative techniques with simple shapes
whereas the latter have complex shapes

with simple decoration and transfer-printed

crests. A greater population of glass items
would be needed before concluding that
crested glassware was never produced in

a novelty shape.
Crested china was produced for 50 years

from the early 1880s so it can be presumed
that crested glassware would not have
been produced outside this period. The

scarcity of the crested glassware might

offer a clue as to production date. I have

assumed that it was priced to match crested
china. Discounting the possibility that it was

made in small numbers as a quality product
range, which clearly it is not, or that it
was more susceptible to damage or that

it was unpopular with holidaymakers, the

remaining reason for its scarcity is that
it was only produced at the end of the

1920s early 1930s when crested china
was in decline. The world economy was

then in depression with high unemploy-

ment. What better time to produce items
with a relatively high labour content.

Czechoslovakia is known to have produced
large volumes of inexpensive glass, much
of it with enamel decoration, during the

inter-war years and is the most likely
producer.
In conclusion, I have assumed that the

glasses were all made in Czechoslovakia

for possibly no more than five or six years

from the late 1920s.
They represent a time when British

working people took their one annual

holiday in Britain — usually at the seaside.

I have avoided the conclusion that as four
out of the twelve examples described carry

the Margate crest, a third of all holidays
were taken in Kent. However, it is perfectly
possible that a retailer in Margate was

amongst the first to stock and sell crested

glassware.
It might not be unreasonable to think

that crested glassware displays little merit.

They would have been designed to be
inexpensive and colourful (cheap and
cheerful!). Despite being small I have no

doubt that each contained many happy,

possibly precious memories of holidays by

the sea. Collectively, they are part of our
social history at a time when only the rich
went abroad. For the collector they have

the great merit that they are scarce,
colourful, small and still inexpensive. So you

can spend a long time and little money

assembling a small colourful collection
which requires very little space.
If you can add to the above in any way,

even if it means contradicting anything

I have said, I would be delighted to hear
from you. I would also be interested in
details and photographs of any crested

glassware owned by readers. I can be

contacted at [email protected].

fig.4: Crested glassware with crests

for Folkestone, Gourock, Margate

andWeston-Super-Mare.

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

13

Art I n

Britain’s tor
Bob & Rt.

Mirror and fishes by JoDouvis.
Chandelier by Aline Johnson.

issions

ops
W

E first visited Art In Action some ten year:

ago. Ever since then, it goes in the diary aE

soon as the dates are announced. Clashes

meant we missed a couple of years, but we made i
again in 2014, and found it better than ever.
Art in Action is bigger and more ambitious than and

other art and craft show we know. It is held over

four days in July when up to 400 artists, craftsmen
performers and musicians gather together ir

Waterperry Gardens just off the M40 near Oxford, tc
demonstrate their skills and show their work. Glass is

very well represented, and, for example, in 2010

Graham Muir’s ‘Waveform’ was voted by the public
as ‘Best of the Best’ against the finest competinc
pieces from all the artists exhibiting in the show.
The areas devoted to glass were much improved ir

2014, with the main demonstration furnace at the

open end of the glass marquee. We watched a ver
b

well explained demonstration by Tim Rawlinson a
London Glassblowing, and there are demonstrations
by different makers throughout each day; their
works are on sale in the main body of the tent

Heather Gillespie and engraved vase

and (below) her Lavender Reed Diffuser.

Vase by Cat Mackensie.

Glass engraving class at Waterperry Gardens.
Pendant by flameworker Astrid Riedel (shown right).

14
THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

fiction

craft show!
Wilcock

Right near the entrance, ready to grab the attention
of every visitor is a smaller demonstration furnace run
by Ed and Margaret Burke, and Anthony Wassell.
There are many practical classes, some for

children, some for adults. They are popular and tend

to get booked up quickly. There were glass engraving
classes in 2014, and hopefully will be again in 2015.

The accompanying images aim to give a flavour of

the show; there is so much, it is impossible to see

it all in a day; many make a long weekend of it, or
combine Art In Action with a visit to Oxford. There

is much more information on the web-site at
www.artinaction.org.uk, including this year’s glass

artists; one of the attractive features of Art In Action
is that featured artists change from year to year.

This year, Ed and Margaret Burke will be there

again, along with Anthony Wassell, but the other

names listed on the website at the time of writing
are new for 2015 — a full list will no doubt be
online when this article appears in the Cone.
The dates are 16-19 July; we shall be there

and hope that you will be able to visit as well!

Vase by

Ed and MargaretBurke.
Two impressive works to show that

Art in Action is not just glass.

His Master’s Voice’ by Ed Burke.

Above: Several pieces by Nicola Steel.
Below: ‘Glass in the Garden:
Above: Floral bowl by Lou Cloke.

Below: ‘Karlin Rushbrook in the makers’ tent.

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015
15

Cutting Edge

A Touring Exhibition of Modern Hungarian Glass

T
HIS is Prisma Gallery’s first ever modern

Hungarian glass exhibition and repre-

sents both emerging makers and

established artists. There is a broad range of

technical skills and innovation within Cutting-

Edge, as well as a wide variety of expression,
including abstract and narrative works com-

bining both traditional and new techniques.

The show highlights the diversity within the
field and explores the unique properties that

make Hungarian glass so distinctive, yet on
a par with the best of Czech, Italian and

Scandinavian glass. Cutting-Edge offers a
unique opportunity to engage with a range of

high end work from Eastern Europe.
Hungarian glassmaking has a long history,

intertwined with Italian, Bohemian, and Czech
glass art. In the medieval period, glass was

mainly used for industrial purposes. In the
early 17th century, Venetian glassmakers were
invited to bring new techniques and artistry to
Hungary. During the 18th and 19th centuries

Hungarian glassmaking reflected the influence
of Venetian blown glass, and the styles of

Czech-Moravian and German crystal glass.
Numerous small glass furnaces and larger
glass factories were scattered all over the

country. Prior to 1945, glass was produced in
workshops using hand-made technology, and

as a result the Hungarian glass industry was
not competitive within Europe.

However, one exception was the important

glassworks in Zlatno, Northern Hungary, where
Janos Gy6rgy Zahn ran his factory. The name

of this factory is associated with iridescent
glass because the brilliant inventor Valentin

Leo Pantocsek worked here. He invented the

iridescent technique that was exhibited and

lauded at the 1862 World’s Fair in London.

Zahn’s factory could not make the novel
technique a commercial success, but
the Austrian Josef Lobmeyr, owner of

J.& L. Lobmeyr, saw great potential
in the new decorative finish. After

enticing one of the Pantocsek’s glassmaking
colleagues away and learning the method,
Lobmeyr helped to make iridescent glass
very popular in the 1870s. The bright and

iridescent surface of this type of glass exerted
its influence on the European art nouveau
style and in the experiments of luster, creating

metallic surfaces, on glass carried out by

Louis Comfort Tiffany in America.
The first important figure in the history of

Hungarian glass design in the 20th century
was Julia Bathory. As a Bauhaus student she
Dr Attila Sik

Toth 2 by Margit Toth.
studied in Munich in the 1920s, before setting

up a glass studio in Paris. After returning to

Hungary in 1940, she started to teach modern
ideas and glass art to students at the

Vocational School of Fine and Applied Arts.

The higher education of glass design was

established at the College of Applied Arts in

Budapest in 1965. The founder and head of
department, Gyorgy Z. Gacs, was a painter

and the approach of modern Hungarian glass

design from fine art, rather than the applied

arts, has always been prominent. For example
his successor, Zoltan Bohus, whose work is
exhibited here, received his major degree in
ornamental painting.
In the Central and Eastern European

regions, Czech glass had the greatest tra-
dition and reputation. Being neighbours, the

two countries had substantial artistic collab-
orations and several Hungarian glass artists
went to learn the trade from the Czech

masters. For example Zsuzsa Vida, who was

tutored by Bathory in Budapest, received a
scholarship to study at the Academy of

Applied Arts in Prague. Her tutors included

Stanislav Libensky and Karel Vanura, and she
graduated as a glass designer. Her works are

also shown in the present exhibition.
The first truly international breakthrough of

the Hungarian studio glass movement was
in 1979. The Corning Museum of Glass

organised a travelling exhibition of modern

glass from all over the world. From several

thousand works submitted, four of the 270

pieces exhibited were by the Hungarian

glass artists: Zoltan Bohus , Zsuzsa Vida,

Erzsebet Katona, and Man Meszaros. The
exhibition tour lasted three years and travelled

around the world. Venues outside the USA
included the Victoria & Albert Museum in

London, the Musee des Arts Decoratifs
in Paris and Seubu Museum of Arts in Tokyo.

One of the most influential trade magazines,

Crafts Horizons,
listed Bohus’s work amongst

its top ten.

Contemporary Hungarian glass art has

gained international fame in recent decades;

major museums all over the world, from the

Musee du Louvre to the British Museum,

Victoria & Albert Museum and important glass

collectors, such as Sir Elton John, are familiar

with the names of contemporary Hungarian
glass artists and proudly exhibit their works in

their collections. Many artists, including Peter
Borkovics, Gy6rgy Gasper, Maria Lugossy

and Laszlo Lukacsi amongst others, have

Arches 1 by Zoluin Bohus.

Action- reaction 2

by ZsuzsaVida.

16

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

East Philosophy 2 by Peter Borkovics.

received prestigious international recognition
including prizes and awards at the Inter-

national Exhibition of Glass Kanazawa, the

Fujita Prize, Libensky Award and the Coburg

International Glass exhibition.

In the Hungarian glass art movement, the

approach to glass as a conceptual, thought-

transforming medium has uniquely stemmed

from the field of fine arts rather than from the
applied arts. The aim of the current exhibition

is to provide an overview of this unique

approach by bringing together works by 17
selected contemporary Hungarian glass

artists covering several artistic generations.
The exhibition commenced in Edinburgh

during April this year, then moved on to the
Lilit by Mdria Lugossy.

Broadfield House Glass Museum for May.
June will see it at the Olympia antiques fair

before transferring to the National Glass

Centre in Sunderland an then on to the NEC in

November. All venues and dates are shown on

Jewel Fan 2 by Ldszla Lukdcsi.
Black hole by Gyorgy Gdspdr.

Prisma Gallery’s website, www.prisma-gallery.com.

They have published a catalogue to accom-
pany the exhibition,
‘Cutting Edge: Modern

Hungarian Glass’,
available from the gallery

and exhibition venues.

Dr Attila Sik is the exhibition curator and

Director of Prisma Gallery.

The 17 participating artists are Zoltan Bohus,
Peter Borkovics, Peter Botos, Istvan Czebe,

Judit Fari
s
GyOrgy Gaspar, Lasz16 Hefter,

Zsuzsanna KorOdi, Maria Lugossy, Laszlo

Lukacsi, Mihaly Melcher, Balazs Sipos,

Agnes Smetana, Margit Toth, Dora Varga,

Zsuzsa Vida and Hajnalka Virag.

Musee des Arts Decoratifs
Paris Exhibition until 15 November 2015

Jean-Luc Olivie

I
N the Muses, des Arts Decoratifs Rivoli

gallery, the Treasures of sand and fire, glass

and crystal at Les Arts Decoratifs, 14th-21st

century’ exhibition will feature a selection of

more than 600 exceptional pieces from the
Renaissance to the present day, taken from

the museum’s reserve collection. The exhibition

traces the development of glassmaking skills

and techniques, revealing the collection’s
wealth and variety. It provides a fascinating

and panoramic overview of the specific styles,

techniques and tastes of each period, paying

tribute to European, Oriental and American
schools and creative centres.

The exhibition is housed chronologically in

twelve rooms. As the visitor passes through,

the history of how the collection evolved

becomes apparent, the pieces on show
coming from the museum’s purchases and

especially the donations and bequests from

enlightened collectors, as always combining

the beautiful and the useful.
Glass with neo-Gothic decoration,

Cristallerie de Saint Louis, France, circa 1835.
‘Treasures of sand and fire’ is the history of

glass told by this collection, today regarded as

one of the finest in Europe.
This exhibition is the first major survey of

the history of glass since the Art du Verre
exhibition at Les Arts Decoratifs in 1951.

Particular attention is understandably paid to

French glassmakers, but goes hand in hand
with a wider international view, illustrated
by comparisons between ancient and con-

temporary pieces and production methods.

A progression of ornamental pieces, ordinary

household objects and artworks will lead

the visitor chronologically from the first to the
second floor of the exhibition.
Each piece also illustrates the tastes of

collectors who actively enriched the collec-

tion, and highlights the major acquisitions

the museum has been making since the 19th
century.

Arabo-Islamic pieces such as Mameluke

enamelled glass are compared to the

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

17

Two Mermaids bowl Rene Lalique (1860-1945),

France, Salon des Artistes Francais 1909,

moulded glass, wheel engraved and patinated,

frosted interior

creations of Philippe J. Brocard in Paris and
the Lobmeyr company in Vienna, alongside

Chinese Qing dynasty glassware that so
fascinated Emile Gall& The exhibition also
takes visitors through the history of European

glass from the 16th to the 18th century, via
donations and bequests by passionate

collectors such as Patrice Salin, Madeleine

Bougenaux, Francois Carnot and Madame

Fernand Bernard. The modernisation of the

glass industry in the early 19th century
prompted the emergence of French luxury

glass and crystal works at centres such as

Baccarat. The originality of the ‘opal crystal’

they produced is one of the collection’s
keynotes.
Les Arts Decoratifs did much to nurture the

blooming and promotion of the major new
surge in glass as an art form, and until 1914

amassed a superb collection featuring works
by Emile Gallo, Rene Lalique and Francois-

Eugene Rousseau.
This active acquisitions policy lost impetus

after the First World War, but spectacular

Mosque lamp in the name of Sultan Baibars H,
Egypt or Syria, 1309-10, blown glass.
additions such as the bequest by Monsieur

and Madame Barthou, passionate collectors

of the glassmakers Maurice Marinot and

Francois Decorchemont, continued to enrich
the museum.
One of the rooms on the upper floor

explores the history of drinking glasses from

1900 to today. The other rooms on this floor
are devoted to French and foreign creation
over the last forty years. This period also

Lino Tagliapietra, Vase, hot-modelled blown

glass, cabled filigree decoration in relief 1993.

saw the emergence of new specialised

organisations reflecting this new dynamism,
such as the founding of the Centre du Verre

at Les Arts Decoratifs in 1982 and the

Rencontres Internationales du Musee du Verre
de Sars Poterie.
The exhibition also highlights the

generations of artists who have transformed
the approach to glass since the 1960s,

featuring the recent wave of talented artists
with pieces by Stanislav Libensky, Jaroslava

Brychtova, Bertil Valien, Richard Meitner,

Bernard Dejonghe, Toots Zynsky, Gaetano
Yoichi Ohira, Cristallo Sommerso Scolpito no.68,

Venice, 2009.

Pesce, Ettore Sottsass and younger creators
such as Damien Francois, Vanessa Mitrani
and Martin Hlubucek.
The Centre International de Recherche sur

le Verre et les Arts Plastiques in Marseille, and
the Centre International d’Art Verrier at

Meisenthal, two institutions actively involved in
contemporary creation, will be showing recent

work by Philippe Parreno (CIRVA), Michel

Paysant (CIAV), and David Dubois (CIAV et

CI R VA) .
This exhibition explores every facet of

glass – this extraordinary material that can

take so many different forms and colours. This
is a history of glass past and present, of taste
and of a unique collection.

Jean-Luc Olivia is the Conservateur en chef,

Departement Verre, Musee des Arts Decoratifs,

107-111 rue de Rivoli, 75001 Paris.

All photographs © Jean Tholance

Maurice Marinot, Golden Parrot bottle, 1928.

18

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

The Engraved Glass of Franz Tieze

MARY BOYDELL finds a consistency of style in the decoration employed
by this Bohemian glass-maker who worked in Dublin.

fig.1: Tumbler

(ht 11.5cm) with

a design ofdeer in a

woodland setting,

engraved by Franz

Tieze (1842-1932).

Bought from the

Pugh glassworks,

Dublin, after its

closure in 1890,
by the National

Museum of

Ireland.

fig.2: A jug and

two goblets

(ht 26cm and

15.5cm) shown

at the 1883 Cork
Exhibition by the

Dublin glass firm

of Frederick
Vodrey. The design,

engraved by Franz

Tieze (1842-1932),

is a classical scene

inspired by the

Parthenon frieze.

National Museum

of Ireland

W

HEN writing about Franz

Tieze, the Bohemian glass
engraver, homage should

be paid to the remarkable Pugh family

of glassmakers who were responsible

for bringing Tieze to Dublin. Richard
Pugh from Wales came to Cork in

the late 18th century where he was

employed by the Cork Glass Company.
Descendants of his family later came

to Dublin where they set up a small
glassworks in Liffey Street in 1854.
1

After a few years, in 1863, they moved

to larger premises in Potter’s Alley
where fine quality glass was made

until 1890. From the middle of the
19th century there had been a growing

demand in these islands for Bohemian

glass, which was on display in shops

and at the numerous exhibitions of
the period both here and in England.

This style of well-engraved glass
became most fashionable and in

order to compete, the Pughs engaged
some Bohemian craftsmen one of
whom was Franz Tieze
(fig.1).

Franz Tieze was born in 1842 in

North Bohemia where he learned his

craft. He came to Dublin via London

in 1865. Seven years later he married

a local girl. Tieze died in 1932, having
spent the last twenty-one years of

his life in Simpson’s Hospital for the
blind.
2
The major part of his work as

a glass engraver in Dublin was devoted
to working in the service of the Pugh
glassworks, though he eventually

undertook work for various Dublin
glass retailers who often imported

their blanks or unadorned wares

from England.
In the context of this article the

attribution of glass engraved by Franz

Tieze is mainly based on the firm
evidence of engraved glass which was

purchased by the National Museum

of Ireland – and its predecessor –
directly from the Pugh glassworks or

from the Pugh family following closure
of the firm in 1890.
3
In addition, a noted

example of his work was purchased
by the Museum from Frederick Vodrey,

a retail glass and china merchant of

Moore Street and Mary Street. This
comprised a jug and two goblets

(fig.2)
exhibited by Vodrey at the

1883 Cork Exhibition and purchased

by the Museum in the same year.

The glass is engraved with a
classical scene inspired by the

Parthenon frieze which was also

used by other continental engravers
of the same period.
4

Few glass engravers’ sketch books
are known and it is indeed most

fortunate that Tieze’s is one of the

few. It was in the Dudley Westropp
collection and, following his death in

1954, it was sold by auction in 1956

to a London glass dealer from whom

it was purchased by the Victoria and

Albert Museum.
5

The drawings in the sketch book

cover a wide range of subjects from

deer in woodland settings and hunting

scenes on the early pages to formal
designs including ferns, flowers and

grasses. The Irish nationalist symbols

of shamrock, the Round Tower, harp

and wolfhound are featured; and

a design for glassware for the
93rd Regiment of Foot, stationed

in Ireland from 1876 to 1879, is

included.
6
There is even a sketch for

decoration on a chamber pot.
Included with the sketch book,

when it was sold in 1956, was a jug

engraved by Tieze in the Bohemian
style with a scene of deer in a
woodland setting drinking by a pool.

This was a popular subject with
engravers of the 19th century from

Bohemia. Also sold with the jug and

the sketch book was a print which
probably was the inspiration for the

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

19

fig:3. Tumbler

(ht 8.5cm) one of

a pair with carafes,
engraved by Franz
Tieze with a motif

of maiden-hair
fern; one of his

commonest motifs,
it was seldom used

by other glass

engravers.
National

Museum of Ireland

fig.4: Cone-shaped

‘brandy’ bottle
(ht 33cm)

engraved by Franz
Tieze with popular

19th-century

nationalist

symbols and round
tower— this was

usually shown by

Tieze incorrectly,
with the door at

ground level.

Private collection

design on the jug; unfortunately the

print has not been traced. The jug

(damaged) is in the Victoria and
Albert Museum, London.

As another indication of the nature

of Franz Tieze’s art, he sold to the

Dublin Museum (now the National
Museum of Ireland) a glass medallion
for a brooch engraved with Venus
seated on a cloud with cupids on

either side.? According to Museum

records, this was engraved between
1870 and 1875; possibly it was for

his wife on the occasion of their

marriage in 1872. Tieze received five
shillings for this brooch in 1911.

Sadly this was the year in which he
was admitted to hospital having

lost his sight.
One of the commonest motifs on

glass by this engraver is the maiden-

hair fern. This was not an unusual
subject to choose for decorative use
during the second half of the 19th

century but was seldom used by
glass engravers other than Tieze.

The cultivation of ferns by ladies in
the drawing room and in Edwardian
cases was a fashionable pastime. In

the
Journal of Design
for 1850 there

is an actual sample of material with
the maiden-hair fern with tendrils
which is referred to as the ‘Designers

sprig’. A decade or so later this fern
was also much used as a decorative

motif on silverware made in England.

In general when Tieze engraved the
maiden-hair fern it was botanically
almost correct.
8
A pair of carafes and

tumblers in the National Museum show

how well the engraver has made use

of this motif: it seems actually to

embrace the form of the vessel like
ivy on a stone or branch of a tree

(fig.3).
The shamrock is used in an
equally effective manner. His stylised

use of flowers in general is shown on

two claret jugs of the same form.
9

On each is engraved a similar

bouquet of flowers on the lower

section of the jug. Amongst these is

a spray of botanically correct blue
bells. A rough drawing for this exists

in his glass engraver’s sketch book.
19

By the middle of the 19th century

the Round Tower, Irish harp, sham-
rock and Irish wolfhound had come to
symbolise Irish nationalist aspirations.

The Belleek factory, and the makers
of the popular bog oak ornaments,

among others, used these as a trade

mark or as a decorative feature. The
shamrock had been in use as an Irish

emblem earlier.” The harp as depicted

by Tieze is based on the ‘Brian Boru’

harp in Trinity College Dublin, which
was well known since it had been

exhibited at the Dublin International

Exhibition of 1853. During the second

half of the 19th century the Round

Tower was commonly illustrated in

numerous publications on the subject
of Irish antiquities; however, when

Tieze engraved the Round Tower
on glass it is usually shown

incorrectly with the door at ground

level
(fig.4).
The wolfhound is based

on the greyhound. There are

two possible reasons for this
peculiarity. The wolfhound had

become almost extinct by the

end of the 19th century and

Tieze would have been unlikely

to have seen one in Dublin;

however Whyte and Sons of

Marlborough Street, who had a

small financial interest in the

Pugh glassworks, also had a
share in the ownership of

Master McGrath, the famed
greyhound who won the

Waterloo Cup on several
occasions.
12
In addition they

had a portrait of this greyhound,
along with a listing of the share-

holders, hung in their showroom and,

to add further to the doggy interest,

in the 1873 advertisement for their
glass and china they added ‘Sole

agents for any good medicine for

dogs’
.
13
By the end of the 19th century

Tieze was most effectively incorpor-
ating flying insects within engraved
design; these appear mainly to be

based on insects with transparent
wings similar to dragon flies or

‘daddy long-legs’ (Hymenoptera),

unlike Belleek pottery and porcelain
decorators who favoured butterflies

(Lepidoptera). Motifs based on grass-
like foliage are however common

to both as shown on the popular

Belleek ‘Grass Pattern’ Tea Ware.
14

Besides working for the Pugh

glassworks and for Vodrey, Tieze

also engraved for William Whyte’s

glass and china shop in Marlborough

Street. As late as the 1890s,
following the closure of the glass-
works, he was using Whyte’s note-

paper for making sketches of glass
designs and for taking rubbings from

completed engravings.
Thomas Leech of Dame Street,

another glass and china shop, also

had glass engraved by Tieze.
15
In

1883 Leech advertised that ‘glass
was exhibited on a special table

under Miss Pugh’s charge’.
16
Firm

evidence has recently come to light

that Tieze engraved for Percival Jones,
another glass and china merchant of
Westmoreland Street.
On Whyte & Sons notepaper

with incomplete date 189…, are
sketches based on various
grasses and these are used to
great effect on a jug which is
definitely known to have originated
in the glassworks of Thomas
Webb of Stourbridge.17,18 B
es

id
es

the grass motifs, the engraving
includes flying insects and
bulrushes
(fig.5).
Around the

upper cup-shaped pouring lip
are garlands of flowers and the
ubiquitous tendrils. Two ice plates
dating from the same period
are engraved with stylised
ferns, grasses possibly based
on plantain, couch grass and
the garden flower Solomon’s

Seal
(fig.

6). Again flying insects

are included in the design. Another
jug, magnificently engraved with floral
and grass motifs and dating from

about 1890, is shown in
fig.8.

Glass engravers seldom sign their

work. It was therefore of the greatest

interest to find in 1980 Franz Tieze’s

initials on the underside of the bowl
of a goblet engraved with shamrock

and a monogram.
19

The engraving

also included the date 1916 which

had been added later by a different

20

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

fig.5:Water Jug

(ht 23cm) from
the glassworks of

Thomas Webb

of Stourbridge,

engraved by Franz
Tieze with grass

motifs, flying

insects and

bulrushes.

Private collection

fig.6: Glass ice
plate (diam. 15cm)

late 19th century,
(detail), one of a
pair engraved by

Franz Tieze with

stylised ferns,
Solomon’s Seal,

grasses based on
the plantain,

couch grass and

flying insects.

Mary Boydell

collection

fig.7: Carafe

(ht 24cm). One of

a pair signed Tieze’

and discovered

in England.

The band of

footless parrots on

oval perches is a
motif not found

previously on

glass attributed

to Franz Tieze.

National Museum of

Ireland

fig.8: Jug (ht 21cm)
magnificently

engraved by Franz

Tieze with a

variety of floral

and grass motifs.

Tieze excelled
with such delicate

subjects.

Private collection

hand. Subsequently the signature

‘Tieze’ was found well hidden within

the shamrock decoration on a wine
glass.
2
° This prompted a closer look

at other examples of engraved glass

attributed to Tieze and revealed that

a jug, also engraved with sprays of
shamrock, was signed
‘Tieze’,
not

only once but twice, and again

hidden within the decoration.
21
Both

the wine glass and the jug are
engraved with the same design
comprising the Round Tower, Irish

harp, a stylised Irish wolfhound and

surmounted by the toast
‘Erin go

Bragh’
within a ribbon. The sprays of

shamrock which surround this group

incorporate tendrils — a characteristic
of Tieze’s engraving when using this

motif. One knows from the structure
of the jug that it dates from after

1870. The manner in which lettering

is engraved on the wine glass and

the ribbon which surrounds it closely

resembles that on a jug in the
National Museum of Ireland which
also features a portrait of Charles

Stewart Parnell.
22
On the occasion

of the 1885 Dublin Artisans’

Exhibition, Parnell visited the Pugh
stall on 3 September and it was

noted that he spent a few minutes
there. Pugh’s display included a
portrait of Parnell. This portrait and

the facsimile of his signature were

taken from a photograph.
23
One

wonders if Parnell appreciated

having his portrait on glass since

figurative work was the weakest
aspect of Tieze’s engraving technique.
Following the publication of the

signed goblet, wine glass and jug, a
pair of signed carafes were found in

England and subsequently purchased
by the National Museum of

Ireland
(fig.7).
These are of

particular interest, since the

engraver uses motifs which

hitherto had not been found on
glass attributed to him. These

comprise, around the body of

the glass, a band of fanciful

footless parrots withdecorative

crests on oval perches. Above

and below this band are
thistle-like flowers and

scroll-like leaflets from
which issue groups

of ferns. Some of

the thistle motifs
support sprays of
grass; and to add

to the fanciful effect

two large tendrils
spring from the vase on

either side of the grasses. The

neck of the carafe is engraved in a

more orthodox manner with a fruiting
vine. The glass in the two carafes is

exceptionally thick in section, thus
suggesting that they were intended

for cutting rather than engraving.
Were they perhaps specially

engraved for a parrot fancier or even

a Mr Parrot?
The most recently found examples

signed by Tieze are a part set
comprising four small jugs and seven

small tumblers. These glasses were

a wedding present to Joseph
Mitchelburne Symes and Adelaide

Gibton on the occasion of their
marriage on 9 June 1897 at the

Mariner’s Church, Dun Laoghaire.

Family tradition is that they were
purchased from Whyte & Sons of

Georges’ Street, Dublin. A cheque
book stub survives made out to

Whyte & Sons, dated 9 April 1897 for
the sum of 222.17s. Would it be too
much to surmise that this was

the amount paid for the
complete set of commissioned

glass? A grandson of Joseph

Symes, when a child, used on
occasions to accompany his
grandfather to Whyte’s; he
recalls how his grandfather
enjoyed these visits and the

kindly attention of Miss Jones,
the saleswoman. Each piece
is engraved with fern-type

sprays and the family
crest surrounded by
two sprays of

maiden-hair fern.
The crest is that of
a head with helmet

with the visor up

and three feather-like

plumes springing from

the rear of the helmet
(fig.9).

These plumes are engraved in a

similar manner to those on a signed

pair of carafes in the National

Museum. Unlike the other signed
examples of this engraver’s skill,

these are signed prominently below

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

21

the decorative design on the lower section

of each glass. This group of glasses is of

the utmost importance, being an example

of Tieze’s work which shows that at 55 he
was still in his prime.
There is little doubt that Tieze was a

very skilled craftsman as shown in his

engravings of subjects such as deer in
woodland settings, hunting scenes and

garlands of flowers. All these subjects he
would have studied while learning his craft

in Bohemia. He also shows his skill when

engraving inscriptions in German Gothic

lettering and in monograms, of which there
are numerous studies in his sketch book.

As already noted, his figurative work is
weak. When he came to London at the age

of twenty, and then on to Dublin, however,

he would have had to adapt his engraving
skills in order to meet the changing fashion

in taste. He thus had to develop his skills to
encompass a wide variety of new subjects
such as classical scenes from the

Parthenon frieze, and designs based on
ferns and grasses. In Dublin, fashion
demanded that he included harps, round

towers, wolfhounds and an abundance of
fig.9: Tumbler (ht 9cm) part of a set and signed

`Tieze. The plumes at the back of the helmet are

similar to those on a signed pair of carafes in the
National Museum of Ireland, and show that at
the age of 55, Tieze was still in his prime as an

engraver.
Glascott Symes collection

shamrock. There was also a demand for

the engraving of commemorative motifs
of particularly Irish interest on glass of
retrospective design or manufacture.

24

With the broadening of subject matter

which he was required to master, his most

imaginative work is undoubtedly to be seen

in the late examples based mainly on
botanical motifs decorated with insects.

MARY BOYDELL was
a writer and lecturer,

President of the Glass Society of Ireland and a

member of the Glass Circle and of the Glass

Association.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

In the preparation of this paper, grateful acknowledge-
ment is due in the first place to Mairead Dunlevy for

her inspiring encouragement. Dr O’Connor of the

Natural History Museum of Ireland and Dr Charles

Nelson of the National Botanical Gardens offered
invaluable help with possible sources of motifs for
plants and insects, and the staff of the National
Museum of Ireland were most helpful in providing

access to examples of Tieze’s engraving. A most

important aspect of this paper was made possible
by Mr and Mrs Glascoll Symes, who brought their

hitherto unpublished set of glasses to my attention.

THIS article
has been extracted with permission

from ‘Irish Arts Review Yearbook’ 1995, voL11.

The Irish Arts Review’ is Ireland’s leading art

and design publication. Selected articles

and further details are available at
www.iriShartsreview.COM

CORK historian Robert Day (1836-1914)
and Franz Tieze collaborated in supplying

goblets to a ready market of glass collectors.

Day researched Irish Volunteer glass designs
and Jacobite toasting glasses. Tieze’s
engraving skills allowed the work to be
categorised as ‘historicist’. Thomas Rohan,

in his
Confessions of a Dealer
(London,

1924), noted the flood of Volunteer and

Williamite glasses in Dublin. An example
of Tieze’s work is the Charlemont Jug,

regarded as genuine until scrutinised firstly

by Mary Boydell and then by Peter Francis,

a modern Irish researcher who found

compelling evidence in Tieze’s own note-
books, showing that the engraving had
been added around 1900. It was sub-

sequently acquired by the National Museum

of Ireland.
POSTSCRIPT

Current thoughts on Franz Tieze
by Brian Clarke

Francis’ revelations appeared in the
Burling-

ton Magazine
in 1994. It was disclosed that

almost without exception every single glass

piece supposedly engraved in support of the

Irish Volunteer regiments of the late 18th
century was the work of Franz Tieze. The glass

was from the period it purported to be, while

the engraving was carried out much later.
As noted in Mary Boydell’s article above,

Tieze was admitted to Simpson’s Hospital in

Dublin in 1910 (or 1911?) and was blind when
admitted. This date conflicts with evidence

unearthed by Mary Boydell and Peter Francis,
which showed that Tieze had been engraving
pieces ‘after 1913 and possibly as late as 1918’.
Initially the researchers investigated only

Williamite glass, which supposedly was made
to celebrate the victory of William of Orange

(1689-1702) over the Stuarts. It was found
that much of this glass was 19th-century, and

some the work of Tieze who had supplied the

pieces to Orange Order lodges. It was noticed

that some of the individuals who had pro-

moted Volunteer and Williamite glass had also

featured in the promotion of Jacobite glass.

Major museums in Ireland and England,

including the Victoria & Albert and the

Museum of London, took a closer look at their
collections and re-attributed the offending

items. It became evident that dealers,
collectors, and museums had not been as

careful as they might have been, in checking

the provenance of the 18th-century engraved
commemorative glass in their collections.

REFERENCES
1.
Mary Boydell, ‘Flint Glass Manufactory, Liffey Street,’

in
Technology Ireland
no.28, Dublin, July/August 1973.

2.
Mary Boydell, ‘Recently Discovered Signatures on

Glass from the Pugh Glassworks in Dublin’,
The Glass

Circle
No.7, 1991, pp.50-52.

3.
Private correspondence between Richard Pugh and

the National Museum of Ireland, now in the Acquisition

Ledgers.
4.
Catriona Macleod, ‘Bohemian Glass-ware at the

Cork Exhibition 1883’,
Studies,
Dublin, Winter 1978,

pp.300-42. Illustrated.

5.
Catalogue of Sotheby’s sale, London, 25 June 1956,

lot 62.

6.
I am grateful to Michael Ball of the National Army

Museum, London for this information.
7.

Illustrated in Catriona Macleod,

Glass in The National

Museum of Ireland, by Thomas & Richard Pugh,
Dublin,

1983, p.81.
8.
See illustrations: M.S.D Westropp
Irish Glass,
1920,

(revised ed. Mary Boydell, Dublin ,1978, plate 2); Mary

Boydell, ‘Some Dublin Glass Makers’,
Dublin Historical

Record,
XXVII, 1974, no.5, p.59; Mcleod 1983, note 7,

p.41.

9.
Illustrated in Westropp 1920, plate 2.

10.
Sketch book, p.79. Illustrated in Mary Boydell,

‘Engravers of Bohemia working in Ireland and England’,

Proceedings of the International Association for the
History of Glass,
Liege, 1981, p.337.

11.
Richard Degenhardt, Belleek, New York, 1978,

pp.35 and 115.

12.
M. Boydell, ‘Some Dublin Glass Makers’,
Dublin

Historical Record,
XXVII, 1974, p.45.
13.

Hackett’s Dublin Almanac.

14.
Degenhardt 1978, p.104.

15.
Macleod 1983, p.59.

16.
Advertisement in
Christmas Sunshine
(unidentified

contemporary Dublin journal).
17.
Tieze’s sketch book, Victoria and Albert Museum,

London, p.87.
18.
I am most grateful to Charles Hajdamach, Director

of the Broadfield House Museum of Glass, Stourbridge,

for identifying the manufacturer of this jug.

19.
Sotheby’s sale in Ireland, Slane Castle, 12 May

1980, Lot 206, ill. See also Boydell 1981, p.338, ill.

20.
Illustrated in Boydell 1991, p.51.

21.
ibid.,

p.51.

22.
Illustrated in Mcleod 1983, p.51, pl.xix.

23.
ibid.,

p.51.

24.
This aspect is being researched by Peter Francis.

22

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER
2015

Starting a Glass Collection

T
HE

Glass
Cone has

previously covered how

antique glass and studio glass

can not only be an interesting and

sometimes compulsive hobby, but

also a financial investment.

My story as a collector and investor

started as a child, when my father returned

from business trips with pieces of Moser
glass
(fig.1).
Then, I did not know where

they came from, nor was I allowed to touch

them. They were never used.
In 2003, by chance I met Michael Harris’s

cousin, Roger Ford. Michael Harris had set

up M’dina glass on Malta, became known

figs 2 and 3
fig.4
Sonia Jackson

fig.1

internationally and later moved to the Isle of

Wight (IOW), where he started IOW glass.

Both of Michael’s two sons, Jonathan and

Timothy have also now become world

famous glass artists.
It was Roger Ford who introduced me,

as an adult, to contemporary studio glass,
gifting to me the first piece of studio

glass in my collection. It is the trial piece

of the Dragon vase
(figs 2 and 3).
The

completed version made and carved by

Jonathan Harris, Michael’s son, is featured

on the front cover of the book
Tapestries

of Colours
by Christopher Woodall Perry

(fig.4).

Whenever possible I now purchase

pieces of studio glass, preferring pieces

made by the Harris family — Michael, his
talented wife Elizabeth (who makes glass
pictures from IOW glass), Timothy
(fig.5),

Jonathan
(fig.6),
and recently work

decorated by Jonathan’s daughter Amy.
In the past twelve years, as my

knowledge has grown, I have ‘branched

out’ and collected pieces of glass made by

other glass artists, modern as well as

antique; my most recent piece being a

Galle art deco vase.
For me, the investment value of my

collection has taken an unexpected turn,

not only has the collection intrinsic value,
but enthusiasm, enquiry and study led me

to start selling antiques. This in turn then

led to working part time for Hansons
Auctioneers and Valuers Ltd. The part-time

job became full time and ‘working through

the ranks’, I became the sale room super-
visor and later a valuer. I am now part

time again, working in ‘Regional Business
Development’, I frequently

sell at antique fairs and Roger

Ford and I invariably attend glass

fairs, always seeking another

unusual piece.

When life stands still, we stagnate.

I wonder where my passion for glass

will direct me in the future.

Sonia Jackson can be contacted at
Hansons Auctioneers and Valuers Ltd
on 07879 810911

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

23

7

80, ALLEYN ROAD.

DULWICH.

TELE. 433
.

80,AI FYN ROAD

DULWICH, S.E.

TELE. 483 SYDENHAM

7. III 1920

Dear Mr Westropp,
A colour in glass

Since my last letter I have come across

the following statement, which confirms Mr Pugh’s

theory. “The Resources, Products, etc. of Birmingham;
a series of Reports to B Association: 1865: Edited
by STimmins : P 177. Red Lead by Henry Alkin’s:

The principal supply of red lead was at one

time from Derbyshire. The quality was inferior

and imparted to the glass an objectional shade
of colour, known in the trade as the Derby blue”.

It would be interesting to find out what

the galena ,from which the Derbyshire red lead

was made, contained. I see that Mrs Stannus
has published a book on Irish Glass ! !
V sincerely

Harry
.
): Powell

Dudley Westropp Esq

Letters From

Harry Powell
Nigel Benson

A
BOUT three years ago

I

noticed a

group of books for sale in auction.
In amongst them was a copy of

Larry Powell’s book
Glass-making in

English.
Although I already owned a copy,

this one had previously belonged to Dudley Westropp and had the advantage of having
a dust wrapper, but also, and intriguingly,
it contained some letters. Dudley Westropp

wrote his book
Irish Glass: A History Of

Glass-Making in Ireland from the Sixteenth

Century
which was published in 1920 and

reprinted in 1978 — now available as an ‘On

Demand’ reprint.
I left a bid and, to my great pleasure,

managed to get the lot which included a
number of books on silver also from

Westropp’s archive. Given that one of the
other lots contained Westropp’s research
on glass I found this peculiar, but have long
since given up working out the thought
processes of auctioneers!
Not having viewed the auction
I

was

delighted when I opened up the parcel to

find that the letters were all from Harry
Powell to Westropp discussing his
thoughts on old glass. There are four, one
of which has sketches with annotations

about the ‘Spring Punty’ gadget.
Perhaps because we are no longer used

to reading handwriting (the computer long
since having usurped the pen), or maybe

it is the technical wording, that means
interpreting the series of letters has been
difficult. However, having at last achieved

the goal, we now know that the letters are

important enough to publish, and plan to
enlarge on this once some further research

has taken place.
For now, however, here is a tantalising

glimpse of one of those letters (with a

transcript of the text) which has an
intriguing last line. This line, with its exclam-
ation marks, perhaps hints at Harry Powell’s
views on Mrs Stannus’s book
Old Irish

Glass,
published in the same year as

Dudley Westropp’s
magnum opus.

Opposite I show Harry Powell’s Letter 3
to Dudley Westropp together with its

transcript.

24

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

Gray-Stan: Luxury Modern Glass

1926-1936

The Exhibition at Broadfield House Glass Museum
September 2014 to early 2015

Comport, opalescent yellow, unmarked.

This comport shows a strong influence in both

style and colour, for whichWhitefriars was famous.

G
RAY-STAN was a small London-based

factory operating during the interwar

period. This exhibition featured Gray-

Stan glass from the collection of Broadfield

House Glass Museum and the private collection
of Sheila Sharman, granddaughter of James

Manning, the master glassblower for Gray-Stan.
It includes a pattern-book which is the only
known example in existence and some other rare

archival material. Most of these items were on
public display for the first time.

The exhibition was organised to coincide

with the AGM of the Glass Association and
publication of the
The Journal of The Glass

Association,
vol.10, which features new research

on Gray-Stan by Charles Hajdamach and Judith

Vincent along with complete illustrations of the

pattern-book and comprehensive photos of

Sheila Sharman’s collection.

The beginnings of Gray-Stan
THE name Gray-Stan is derived from its founder,

Mrs Elizabeth Graydon-Stannus, an Irish antique

glass dealer who moved to London in 1908.

By 1920 she had published her first book and
established a reputation as an expert in Irish

glass. In 1922 she set up a glassmaking studio to

reproduce Irish designs. This surprising venture
into glassmaking attracted criticism for her focus

on reproductions, to which she replied ‘My

endeavour is to create
not
copy’. However,

thanks to more recent research, we know that

some items produced by the factory were being

sold as genuine antiques.

Battersea factory

IN 1925 the glassmaking workshop moved to
Battersea and this period marks a change in

focus from reproduction glass to coloured art

glass. The workforce consisted of approximately
a dozen men, including James Manning, a

brilliant glassmaker and artist, who was

responsible for many of the striking colour effects
seen in Gray-Stan glass. Mrs Graydon-Stannus

said she became interested in using colour

because she felt it was being underused in British

design. She liked to stress the individuality and

handmade nature of the glass from her ‘little

factory’. She also encouraged a democratic style

of management and workers were encouraged

to experiment with designs. In this way, she was

not only creating modern products but modern
work practices too.

Luxury modern glass

THE
company evolved a wide range of designs

with a choice of colours, textures and patterns,

but it is the cloudy colour ranges which are the

most distinctive and original of all. The high skill
levels involved in creating these products meant

that they were quite expensive — The Modern

Comport, ribbed, amber with green rim to foot,
unmarked.

Swan and Bird, clear, both unmarked.

These are shown in the catalogue as no.45

on page 44 in ‘cruet sets’ so may be salt cellars.
Watercolour byJames Manning ofa self-portrait

with Elizabeth Graydon-Stannus, making a

comport similar to the one shown on the left.

Luxury Glass’ was the phrase used on pro-
motional material. Mrs Graydon-Stannus was an

astute business woman and realised that the

biggest profits would not come from the home

market, but overseas, in particular the USA.
Work was sold through exclusive galleries in New
York and glass exported as far afield as Toronto

and Buenos Aires.

The end of Gray-Stan

IT is not known exactly why the company closed
in 1936 but the successful export market dried

up following the 1929 Wall Street crash. The firm
was probably experiencing financial difficulties,
but Mrs Graydon-Stannus may also have simply

lost interest. She had no further involvement in
glass production and died in 1961.

Gray-Stan is an unusual story in the history of

British glassmaking — the contrasting products
of antique reproductions and modern art glass,

the small team of skilled workmen with a woman
at the helm, the small scale production that was

still commercially viable. During this period very

few factories produced art glass that has stood
the test of time but Gray-Stan is one of the few.

‘The “Complete Catalogue; Gray-Stan Glass”

An Exciting Discovery’ is printed in
The Journal

of the Glass Association,
vol.10. Copies are

currently available from Maurice Wimpory,

email [email protected]

A complete professional photographic record
of the exhibition glass, along with captions in a
separate file is shown on the Glass Association’s

website
(access for Glass Association members).

A
thank you to Kari Moodie at Broadfield House

Glass Museum for permission to use the above

text as an overview of the Gray-Stan exhibition.

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

25

Visit of American Paperweight Maker Jim Brown

Richard M. Giles

W
ITH the paperweight-making world in

Britain much reduced from its heyday

In the 1970s and ’80s it is quite difficult

to find new speakers for members’ meetings.

One source of supply is America, but this has its
own problems for the organiser related to the
cost, unless the makers are prepared to fund at

least part of the cost themselves with the other
part offset by the weights that they are able to sell

to members or dealers while they are here.
In 2012 members of the Paperweight Collec-

tors Circle were fortunate to have the chance

to listen to Damon McNaught relating his
paperweight-making story and 2013 brought us

Gordon Smith. Last year, 2014, the organisers
were able to continue the format by bringing us

Jim Brown, who was a collector of paperweights

but, unlike most of the other makers, had no

previous background in design of any sort or

of glassmaking when he took up making

paperweights.
He spent some thirty years as an engineer in a

naval background and tells the story that a poor
appraisal at work in 1999 set him thinking about

an alternative occupation. He admitted that

without the support of his wife, who was a nurse,
in both practical and financial terms he wouldn’t

have been able to pursue his dream of making

millefiori paperweights. He signed up for a
glassmaking course at Tennessee Technology

University but, being totally new to glassmaking,
he had to start from scratch both with regard to

VIM

Little Things in Glass and
metal and plastic too

Tom J. Lawson

ISBN 978-0-9542354-1-3

Paperback —106 pp — Over 100 colour
and b/w illustrations

GML Publishing £12.90

THIS book is sub-titled The biography of The

English Glass Company Ltd 1934-1990′ and
its author was the first chairman after the

management buy out in 1990, and remained

in that position until his retirement in 1993. He

had joined the company in 1958 as Technical
Manager, his brief to form another department

to develop new products and diversify the
company’s product range. He soon became

the technical director, ten years later he was

appointed managing director and ten years after

that the Chief Executive.

Tom was born in Czechoslovakia and in 1939

he moved to the UK with his parents as refugees.

His father, Josef Oplatek had worked at
Glasfabriken Fischmann Sohne in Jablonec

(Bohemia) which made a range of glass

products. As general manager, Josef had

corresponded with the John Bull Rubber

Company of Leicester as they wanted to buy

glass rods; eventually assistance was requested

to set up a glass production unit in Leicester.
Jim Brown — close-pack weight.
Jim Brown — concentric millefiori.

BOOK REVIEWS

The English Glass Company Ltd was founded

by the managing director of The John Bull

Rubber Co. Ltd. It was incorporated in 1934

and initially manufactured and sold a range of
glass consumer products and small pressed

technical glassware to industry. By 1939 the

English Glass Company had a debt equivalent
to £3,000 (over 21/4 million in today’s values).

In late 1939 Josef Oplatek and his wife were

allowed to rent part of the company premises

for producing glass jewellery and coloured
reflectors for the UK market, on the condition

they invested some of their limited resources
back into the business.
Together they built up the fancy jewellery

business which became so successful that, by

the end of World War II, Josef Oplatek had
become Managing Director of The English Glass
Company and had eliminated the original

company debt. He also expanded the technical
glass side of the business and with some Ministry

of Defence work had laid the foundations of

a thriving business.
The book is divided into four main chapters

covering the history, the business and the

company’s products and acquisitions. There is

much detailed information about the company,

its products, manufacturing processes and
glass properties.
The range of products made over the years by

the company is extensive, ranging from reflectors
the purchase of the necessary equipment and

then experimenting with the practicalities of

turning a dream into reality.

I and many others present were expecting a

tale of trial and tribulation as he developed his

skills but, somewhat surprisingly, he stated that
by the end of about six months he was making

reasonable quality paperweights. This also included
developing the techniques for making his own

millefiori canework, which is not easy when
working completely on your own. Cutting and

polishing techniques were also developed, so he

was able to offer a completely finished product.
When we first saw examples of his weights

I was slightly put off by the fact that they were
generally in rather pale colourings and therefore

in our view rather lacked any real punch, but

eventually we came across the close-pack
weight pictured which did have a good selection

of both canes and colours. This was purchased
in 2001 which was fairly soon after he launched

his weights onto the market. Compare that
weight to the very nice concentric millefiori with

decorative cutting purchased at the meeting

and you can see the improvement in quality

developed over the intervening years, although

he did admit that the cutting on this particular

weight was carried out by a friend who

specialised in glass cutting. It was good to get

the chance to meet and talk to such a pleasant

and unassuming couple about a subject that

means so much to all those present.

and lenses for many
different items to useful

decorative items such as

dress and hat pins to

marbles, paperweights

and items for retailing

in museums and for

jubilees. If you had a Box

Brownie the lens would

have been made by the
company.

During his time there,

and metal and plastic too

Tom was responsible
for introducing a new division — the Dispenser

Division. We are all familiar with using pump and

sprayer dispensers now but it was Tom who

introduced them to the UK market after seeing

them in Denmark.

I have to admit until I read this book I had

never heard of the English Glass Company,
but after reading it I was amazed at the number

of everyday products they made and the

innovative and enterprising products they

introduced.

This book will be of interest to people who

wish to learn more about the industrial history

of the company and how a small company

using an age-old production process became

successful by exploiting an unusual variety of

niche products into a variety of markets.
Judith Gower
Little Th

n Glass

26

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

A HIS “1 oRY OF

GLASSM
IN LOND
COND EDITIO

11t()%1 I III I %RI 11 `,1 11N11.'”

I4

.

/

I() I III. PHI SUN I DAN
BOOK REVIEWS

DAVID C. WATTS

A History of Glassmaking
in London: from the

earliest times to

the present day

2nd edition by Dr David Watts

Softback, 324pp, ISBN 978-0-9562116-2-0.

Watts Publishing, 2014

Available priced £50 through
www.glassmaking-in-london.co.uk

IT isn’t always the case that one can say it was a
pleasure to be asked to review a book, but so

this turned out to be. Dr David Watts adeptly

traces the history of glass in London placing it

in its historical context. He discusses the pro-
gression of glass production in London, the

patronage and circumstances that allowed its

development in medieval times, then progressing

on to manufacturers and designers through to

modern times, the technology and equipment
introduced and the types of glass produced,

both industrial and art-based, allowing the reader

to easily dip into the text to find the reference

they need with a good index to aid the search.

His easy writing style also lets one read through

with ease.
This edition of the book has been revised,

updated, added to, and as you might expect

from this author, is thoroughly researched and

full of information and illustrations. Having now

grown from 166 pages to 324, these additions all
but double the size of the original publication.

The book is split into three sections: eight
chapters on the History of Glass, followed by one

on Glassmaking, with the largest section of

20 chapters about the Glasshouses of London.

Each chapter has copious references and
notes, underlining the scholarly approach taken

by Dr Watts.
Although some of the illustrations and

photography in the book have suffered from
becoming a tad granular during the production

process, the artwork as a whole gives the

reader such a great insight into the story of

London glass and glassmaking it is easily

overlooked. It should also be noted that there are

many illustrations here that are totally original to

this edition, helping to give a new dimension

to the subject.
Many collectors could well be unaware of

the importance of London glass within the
progression of glass in Britain, possibly being

more mindful of the production known

generically as Stourbridge glass, from what is
known as the West Midlands. However, there

were many glasshouses in London, both inside

and outside the City wall.
It is possible that some collectors would

naturally think of glass vessels being formative
in the history of glass production, however Dr

Watts traces the beginnings of glass in this

country, centred on London, through window
glass and the painters involved in its decoration

and the politics that impinged upon its

development, whether enlarging the skill base

or curtailing it – for instance the dissolution of

the monasteries having a diverting effect from

stained glass made for royalty and the church

toward more secular uses.

Although there was some upheaval due to

religious intolerance in this country, particularly

during the reign of Mary I, it was far more

dangerous on the Continent where religious

upheaval was much greater. England became

a shelter to many glassmakers, some settling in

London with others spreading much further

afield, including to existing glassworks in the

Weald, but also as far as Salisbury and
Newcastle upon Tyne. This influx was over a

protracted period and was hugely influential

upon British glass production as is laid out so

adeptly in the book.

He shows how politics, patronage, Royal

Licences and Patents of Privilege, entwined

Powell barrel vase in sea green

with bubbled blue ribbon-trailing
designed by James Hogan, c.1934.
Powell straw-opal solifleur vase

in metal mount, c.1890.

with envy, petitioning of the Privy Council, liti-

gation and ignoring of the law, all combined to
create a maelstrom of intrigue and personalities

attached to the history of glass in London,
culminating in the monopoly of Sir Robert

Mansell. Against all instincts, the monopoly
enforced by Mansell was beneficial to the glass

industry as a whole and London in particular

since by 1639 there was a regulated pattern of
production along with establishment of prices

for various products mostly associated with the

production of window glass.
The final chapter of the first section takes the

reader from the Venetian-style drinking vessels

that had hitherto been so desirable by royalty and

nobility, into a new English style of glass vessel

that was made to be cheaper and more durable

than its predecessors. One of the factors that
had exercised makers of glass in this country
was the clarity of glass that had been produced

and it was in London that this problem was finally

solved, through accidental circumstances, by

George Ravenscroft. After initial problems of

crizzling, which was resolved through research,
what we now habitually refer to as English lead-

crystal glass was able to be produced on an

industrial scale and it is this that changed London

and British glassmaking completely.

Dr Watts is at pains to enlighten the reader as

to how he sees the circumstantial invention of

lead-crystal glass coming about, through the

intention to create something else entirely.
Ravenscroft, having seen an opportunity to

extend his sales of lace, devised a way to meet

up with Johannes Baptista da Costa, who had

come to London from Rotterdam. Da Costa

specialised in making false gems and bijouterie

from glass and it was this that Ravenscroft was

interested in. The collaboration was to make

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

27

BOOK REVIEWS

Pre-war Nazeing ‘Swirl’ barrel vase, c.1935.

calcedonio
glass, which Ravenscroft facilitated,

it being too complex and fraught for da Costa to

organise, yet it ended in the all-but-accidental

invention of lead crystal, though as mentioned

above, it initially suffered from Grizzling.
The section on glassmaking delves further

into the use of materials and methods of heating

that exercised so many protagonists within the

London glass world, giving the reader a greater

understanding of the needs of those glass-

makers. Dr Watts’ appreciation of the chemistry
associated with glassmaking helps the reader

enormously with both the decolourising of glass

and the creation of coloured glass.
The largest section of the book discusses

the glasshouses based geographically along the

south and north banks of the Thames, followed
by those more diversely located and associated
with London. Many, if not all, of the sites of

London glasshouses have been visited by the
author who has furnished us with photographs
of current views of historic sites. Maps of the

period show where the original glasshouses were

positioned and Dr Watts also mentions when
names of roads have been changed should the

reader wish to go on their own pilgrimage to visit

these formative areas of the industry.

Throughout the book the author talks about

the well-known companies alongside more

obscure glass businesses that have either been

forgotten until now, or that have very little known
about them. Where possible he has added to our
knowledge of these lesser-known companies;

sometimes though he has only been able to flag

up their existence suggesting more work is

needed, since the information is just too obscure

to find at this point in time. This, of course, is

the nature of books: there is always some more
information that can come to light; indeed that

is the reason for this updated and enlarged
second edition of his book, Dr David Watts

using the information that came to him after the

original publication.
The London Sand Blast Decorative Glass

Works company (LSBDGW) is known largely

through their prestigious work made for ocean

liners and designed by some top designers of

their day, perhaps the best known now being
John Hutton, of Coventry Cathedral fame. The
work produced by the LSBDGW reached its
zenith in 1928, although the firm continued until

1967, but as Dr Watts observes:
There is still

much to learn about this remarkable firm.

Century Glass of Edmonton is another such

firm that requires more research: it made pressed
glass items, many of which imitated cut glass of

the day but, given their method of production,
making them more affordable. There is some

confusion about their production, since it is

possible that a proportion of its production was
actually made by Davidson’s.
Sadly, all of the original glass industry in

London has now gone, although Nazeing Glass
Works remains as a link to those days, with its
own history traceable to Lambeth and Southwark.

There are, however, modern glass businesses
that continue the long history of glass made

in London. Some, such as Anthony Stern in
Battersea and Peter Layton in Bermondsey

Street, not far from London Bridge Station, have

their own long association with London. Other
glassmakers have been more fleeting, such as

Barry Cullen, while another, Adam Aaronson,

was forced out of his premises near Earls Court
by re-development of the area, and moved to just

outside the M25 in West Horsley, Surrey. Both

Layton and Aaronson are examples of successful
maker-galleries that give hope for the future,

particularly with each encouraging younger
makers through different approaches within the

way they run their respective businesses.
There are also very successful engravers

carrying on the tradition of being located in

London with one of the most well known,

Bermondsey glass Madonna head

designed by Guy Underwood, c.1930.
Charles Kempton,

Albert works trumpet vase, c.1886.

Katharine Coleman, having a workshop in
Clerkenwell. It is perhaps easier for individual

makers to remain based in the capital, however
when one considers the property values and

consequent rents, even that has become far

more difficult. The fact that there are still

glassmaking businesses in London is reassuring

and does at least give hope for the future.
Dr David Watts has given us a book that

extends our knowledge of London glassmaking,

its history, archaeology and geography. The
phenomenal amount of work involved in finding

and assembling the information contained

within the covers of this tome is self-evident

and will encourage the reader to dip into the

material within.
If you have ever wanted to understand about

the whys and wherefores of London’s glass-

making industry and its history then this is the

book for your edification — and even if you already

feel you have an understanding, it will bolster

and increase your knowledge. A very worthwhile

addition to our canon of information and to

any library on the subject of glass.

Nigel
Benson

NOTE: Images of glass in this review are
supplied by Nigel Benson and not taken from

the reviewed book.

28

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

Lot 945.

Gold and Silver

Elvis Presley’ vases.

Allister and Jonathan
checking the silver
doodle vase.

MEMBERS NEWS

`What price provenance?’

by Neil Chaney

ANDERSON & Garland are one of the most

prestigious auctioneers in the North East of

England, based in Newcastle, erstwhile home
of the Beilbys and a great centre of glassmaking

in the 18th century. I am always happy to visit

Newcastle, so I decided to attend their Fine Art
sale back in March this year when a good

number of Georgian drinking glasses were

up for sale.
I viewed the glasses the afternoon before

the sale and turning up

at the saleroom the

following morning (the

glasses came up first)

I was astounded by
the number of people
present. The saleroom

was almost full, unlike

the normal sale where

a dozen or so bidders

would typically compete

for the glasses available.

I was even more as-

tounded by the prices
realised!
A simple hop and

barley engraved, plain

Lot 986.

stem ale glass made

Glass Association events
Moreton

Sunday 13 September
A visit to St Nicholas’ Church, Moreton, Dorset,

to see the stunning engraved glass windows by

Laurence Whistler and to Athelhampton Tudor

Manor House (near Dorchester).

Book by 31 August.
Booking form enclosed

18th-century glassmaking

Saturday 3 October
‘Let’s Twist Again at Quarley’ with the Georgian

Glassmaker’s.
Booking form enclosed

GA AGM

Saturday 17 October
Meeting at the Pyramid Complex, Warrington

and viewing the glass at Warrington Museum.

Final details to follow. SAVE THE DATE

Other events

Art in Action 2015

16-19 July
Over ten glassmakers exhibiting. At Waterperry

Gardens, Waterperry House, Waterperry, near

Wheatley, Oxford. www.artinaction.org.uk
£260 hammer (lot 945), a trumpet bowled plain

stem wine glass with air tear and folded foot

made £350 hammer (lot 951), an ogee-bowled

double series opaque twist (DSOT) wine glass

made £320 hammer (lot 976), and the fruiting

vine engraved Beilby DSOT made a stunning

£2,800 hammer (lot 986); all prices significantly

above full retail, and that’s without the addition of

buyer’s premium and VAT which would add

another 25% or so to the cost.
Needless to say, as a dealer, my journey was

fruitless save for the satisfaction that my stock of
Georgian glass could potentially be worth more

than I had realised. It wasn’t even that the

glasses were perfect, as there was the normal

mixture of the good and the restored in the
collection. But there was a story behind

the glasses, and this surely was responsible
for the inflated prices.
The glasses were part of a one person

collection, a local doctor who had been well liked

and respected in the community. He had also
kept every receipt he had been given as he

bought a glass, so that each lot could be tracked

back to the dealer from whom he had bought it,

and that provenance appeared in the catalogue.
I spoke some buyers afterwards, and each was

happy to have acquired one of ‘his’ glasses, as a

memento of the previous owner, and nobody
seemed concerned that they may have paid retail
plus for the privilege.

National Glass Fairs

The traditional second fair for 2015 will be held
Sunday 22 November at the National
Motorcycle Museum nr. Birmingham.

Details: www.glassfairs.co.uk
‘Cambridge’ Glass Fair at Knebworth,

Stevenage, Herts. Sunday 11 October.

Abroad in 2016
SPAIN:
Barcelona / Cataluna is the destination for our

next trip abroad. The visit is based in Barcelona,

where we’ll spend two days, then a day to

Peralada in the province of Gerona and a day in

Sitges. Viewing glass in museums, buildings
and collections. We’ll arrive on Wednesday

evening 13 April 2016 – the visit ending on
17 April.
Full details to follow by email and on

our website.

FRAUENAU:
Glass Engraving Network. Its last European

exhibition on the current tour at Glasmuseum
Frauenau. In Bavaria, Germany, close to
Munich. To see the engraved art glass, all of the

museum and the arts centre at Bildwerk. Dates

now agreed as 16-18 September 2016.

Please express your interest in both or either
events above by emailing Maurice Wimpory

([email protected]) or Brian Clarke

([email protected])

Please check our website for full information
and booking forms where required:
www.glassassociation.co.uk
In the trade we often

speak of the historic story

that an old glass could tell

if it could talk. Rarely do we

think of them in terms of

formert owners, save for

purposes of provenance. It
was heart-warming to know

that an individual could
inspire such activity. Let’s

hope that this is remem-

bered when the glasses are

eventually sold on.

Neil Chaney is a collector

and dealer, specialising in

18th-century English glass.

Email:
contact@

theworldismadeofglass. co.uk

A Glass Festival full of Doodles

AT the International Festival of Glass in
Stourbridge this spring, the British Glass

Foundation (BGF) came up with a wonderful

project – asking celebrities to provide doodles.

Talented glassmakers donated time in this

special scheme throughout the festival to create
works of glass art inspired by the celebrity’s

Doodles. Images of the finished pieces will be

unveiled soon. Allister Malcolm, Jonathan Harris

and others, worked on the Doodles in the Hot

Glass Studio at Broadfield House Glass Museum

(BHGM). All pieces will be auctioned off later this

year by Fielding’s Auctioneers in their ‘Decades

of Design’ sale to raise funds for the work of BGF.
Sale date – 24 October.

Jonathan, with the

help of daughter Amy,

created and hand-

carved three amazing
designs, incorporating

Mark Hill’s doodle that
are hoped to attract the

attention of all glass,

‘Elvis’ and music fans!

Initially, Allister Malcolm

produced two blanks
with small necks on

them – these were then
covered with exorbitant

amounts, in many layers, of 24ct gold and
sterling silver leaf. Jonathan Harris then

painstakingly sand carved away the silver and

gold to create the imagery. Jonathan worked

together with Allister at BHGM to complete

the final ‘reheat’ stages

of these ‘one off’
cameo and cased graal

pieces; the ’embryos’

were preheated in a kiln

up to 450°C, allowing

them to be picked up
on a blowing iron. The

embryos were then
cased in another layer

of molten glass by

dipping them in the

furnace.

WHAT’S ON

THE GLASS CONE NO.107 SUMMER 2015

29

The Glass Cone

THE MAGAZINE OF THE GLASS ASSOCIATION
www.glassassociation.org.uk

PROMOTING THE UNDERSTANDING AND APPRECIATION OF GLASS