Mr A Alexander

Mr R Anderson

Mr & Mrs G Bates

Mr E Cavagliotti

Ms M Frances

London

Nottinghamshire

Leicestershire

London
Bristol

The

Glass Cone
Issue No: 84 — Autumn 2008

The Magazine of

The Glass Association
Registered as a Charity No. 326602

Chairman
Dr. Brian Clarke: chairmanAglassassociation.org.uk

Hon. Secretary

Yvonne Cocking, 14 Southfield Drive, Sutton Courtenay,

Abingdon, Oxon, OX14 4AY
(secretary(&glassassociation.org.uk)

Editorial Board
Bob Wilcock (The Glass Cone), Mark Hill (The Journal),

Yvonne Cocking

Address for Glass Cone correspondence
E-mail to editorAglassassociation.org.uk or mail to

Bob Wilcock, 24 Hamilton Crescent, Brentwood, Essex,

CM14 5ES

Address for membership enquiries & backnumbers
Pauline Wimpory, Membership Secretary,
150 Braemar Road, Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands,

B73 6LZ

(membershipAglassassociation.org.uk)

Committee
Mark Hill (Vice-Chairman); Paul Bishop; Roger Dodsworth;

Jackie Fairburn; Francis Grew; Valerie Humphries;
Gaby Marcon; Janet Sergison; Maurice Wimpory (Treasurer)

Website:
www.glassassociation.org.uk

E-mail news & events to newsAglassassociation.org.uk

Printed
by Jones and Palmer Ltd: wwwjonesandpalmer.co.uk

Published
by The Glass Association

ISSN No. 0265 9654

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:

21 January—publication late March

Summer:

21 April—publication late June

Autumn:

21 July—publication late September

Winter:

21 October—publication early January

Articles are welcome at any time, but please bear the above dates
in mind if you have an event you would like to be
publicised
THE GLASS ASSOCIATION AG

Saturday October 18
th

at The Wallace Collection
Hertford House, Manchester Square,
London W1U 3BN

This year The Wallace Collection, a national museum in

an historic London town-house, whose collections include a small
but unique collection of Venetian glass, has extended the use of its

facilities for our AGM. In London again, after an absence of three

years, we hope to see many more of our members from London and
the South, and indeed the whole country.

The morning will be taken up with a final look at this

year’s topic of Czech glass: from their collections, Nigel Benson
and Maurice Wimpory are going to show us their “Top Ten” pieces,
Maurice will also be engaging us with an insight into “What’s
Czech and what’s German”. The morning will conclude with Mark
Hill giving an overview on “Czech glass from the collector’s point

of view”.

This will then be followed by the AGM, a break for lunch,

and time to wander around the magnificent Wallace Collection.

We are fortunate to have Jeanette Hayhurst giving the first

of the afternoon presentations: a lesson on “Fakes &

Reproductions”. Jeanette has many new examples with which to

surprise us and perhaps cause us concern – a not-to-be-missed

session by one of the most highly regarded experts of 18`
h
& 19
6

Century glass.

The afternoon is completed by an introduction into what

we hope will be an area of interest for the coming year. Venetian
glass, from its heyday in the 16
th
& 17
th
Centuries and its revival in

the late 18′
h
Century, with an emphasis on its influence on Harry

Powell & Whitefriars’ early glass, with a note on Frederick Carder

and Steuben glass. Rebecca Wallis, a curator at the Wallace, will
introduce us to their collection of early Venetian glass.

The day’s programme, with costs and times, is on the

enclosed booking form. Any queries, please be in touch with

Events Secretary, Gaby Marcon at gabymarconAbtinternet.com or
07711 262 649. Booking forms are also downloadable from our

website, www.glassassociation.org.uk.

This issue covers four centuries, from 18
th
to 21
st
. Sylva

Petrova’s article on Czech Glass has had to be held over to the next
issue, which will perhaps lean towards the contemporary: as I write

the International Festival of Glass is still something to look forward

to and enjoy. The programme is so packed that no one person can

go to every activity and event, so if there was an event or activity in

the Festival that really stood out for you, please send me a few

words about it. If you have a stunning photo, or three, do send me a

scan (by e-mail or on disc); I’ll publish as many as I can.

Bob Wilcock

Cover Illustration:

A superb marriage of glass and art—
`Eclipse’ by Yan Zoritchak at the Musee Faure,

Aix-les-Bains
27 June-15 September 2008

IMMUM

The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008
Mr D Holberton

Mr G Kuhnel

Mr K Morgan

Mr S Thomeycroft

Dr R Wise

& Ms H Bracklow
Middlesex

S Yorkshire

Buckinghamshire
Worcestershire

Essex

2

Four Blyth men 1895

My article in Glass Cone No. 78 dealt entirely with

glasses relating to mining accidents and other matters concerning

the coal mining industry in Northeast England during the late 19th
century. I think, however, that they should be seen in the wider

context of other commemorative glasses produced in Northeast

England at the same time. The subjects recorded on these other

glasses seem to fall naturally into the following categories; non-
mining accidents, public figures and matters of local interest, deaths

of individuals, and national events. Although it is the distinctive
mining-related group that has given them the all-embracing name of

`Disaster Glasses’ I hope to show that these other categories are

related to the mining glasses so closely in time and place that they
could all be more properly called the ‘Commemorative Glass of

Northeast England’.

Non

mining Accidents

A good example of this group was the death of the Nobley

brothers that I discussed in the previous article, but the most serious

and notorious accident that occurred during the period of popularity
of these glasses and which can
be found almost as frequently as

those recording the Hartley

Colliery disaster, took place on
16 June 1883 when 182

children lost their lives at the

Victoria Hall in Sunderland. At
the end of a children’s

matinee entertainment dolls

and toys were thrown from
the stage into the audience.

The children in the gallery,
not wishing to miss out,

Victoria Hall Disaster 1883

rushed down the stairs to find

that one of the two swing

doors giving access to the gallery was still bolted to the floor,
allowing only a narrow exit gap. This resulted in a catastrophic

crush and most of the children died of suffocation. Efforts to
release the swing door failed because it opened inwards (i.e.

towards the crush). A national relief
fund was started to which Queen

Victoria donated £50 and, as a result

of a government enquiry, all places

of public entertainment were
required to have doors which opened

outwards. The various versions of

this event , engraved on a variety of
glasses, differ mainly on the number

of victims. An estimate of two

hundred occurs regularly which may
indicate that some of the glasses

were produced before the final death

toll was established.

Several shipping and

boating accidents are
commemorated. On 5 November
1884 the S.S. Regian [sic] was on its

way from Calcutta to Dundee with a
cargo of jute when it ran aground on

the Bondicar rocks near Amble on
the coast. The ship broke up and was a complete loss but

newspaper reports make no reference to any loss of life. Other

glasses, refer to drowning and among them is one with the

following inscription,
‘In

Memory of four Blyth men,

George W Nicholson 22,

George Brown 30, Thomas

Brown 21, George Dawson 30

who were drowned 13 July
1895’
which is recorded on a

pub rummer, It appears that the
four had set off from Blyth in a

small boat, the Marie, to cruise
around the bay but they failed to
return. It is not clear what
happened and there were no
ports of bad weather, but two

days later a steamer arriving in

Newcastle reported having seen

an upturned boat which
matched the description of the

Marie. Although one of the
men was a seaman, none of

them could swim.

Another glass inscribed,
‘The Jarrow Boat Disaster

26 Sept 1896
7
lives lost’,
offers a good example of the human

dramas that these simple glasses
conceal. After the last crossing of
the regular ferry from Jarrow to

Howden, across the river Tyne, a
custom seems to have arisen that

one of the crew of the Tyne General
Ferry Company would take any

passengers who had missed the last
ferry across the river in a sculler

boat. On the evening in question
the boat was carrying eight

passengers and the boatman Robert

Young. The report in the local

paper says that the sea was calm and
that there appeared to be nothing

untoward about the boat “but as the

boat made its way across the river
some serious defect became
apparent and produced the terrible

tragedy”. The two survivors said

that about half-way across one of

the women said that there was water
around her feet and that this was

.farrow Boat 1896

confirmed by another passenger.

The boatman made some jocular

remark about the possibility that they would have to swim

before it rapidly became clear that the boat was filling with

water and sinking. One passenger, John Osborne, who was
reported as being
“well skilled in the art of natation”

jumped

overboard and set off for the shore but despite the reduction of

weight in the boat it went down by the stern and the remaining

occupants were left struggling in the water. Shouts and screams

were heard on the shore and a boat was launched. A second

survivor, Thomas Campbell was found clinging to the half-

The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008

3

also question why such a glass was produced. Who would want to

be reminded that they had lost all their savings?

Among other public events recorded on glass is the

opening of the Albert Edward Dock in 1884, by the Prince of
Wales.

Among the local worthies commemorated were ex-miners

Charles Fenwick and Thomas Burt who were local MPs. Andrew

Colvin who died in 1895 at the

age of 84 had worked as a miner
until, in 1843, he qualified as a
Wesleyan minister and became
renowned as a preacher. He was
known locally as Saint Andrew.

In a different social class, the

name of Lord Warkworth, the
son of the Duke of

Northumberland, appears on a
glass dated 1895 wishing him
success on the occasion of his
election to Parliament as MP. for
South Kensington. Warkworth

Castle had been the home of the
Dukes of Northumberland before

they moved to Alnwick Castle.

Deaths

submerged boat and taken ashore. Of the remaining passengers, the

bodies of the two women were recovered floating, buoyed up by

their clothes, and attempts were made to resuscitate them, but in
vain. An unusual feature of this and the preceding glass is that they

are both engraved with a boat.

Another accident that was widely reported and is the

subject of several glasses we have seen was the accidental death of
Lady Grey, wife of the Foreign Minister, Lord Grey of Falloden.
On the 1st February
1906 she was out

driving her pony and

trap when the pony
shied and she was

thrown to the ground

and sustained head
injuries from which she

died three days later. It

is unusual for members

of the upper classes to
be remembered in this

way, so one assumes
she was held in high
regard locally.

and Matters of Local Interest
This group includes a wide range of events that were

reported in the Northumberland and Co. Durham press. Most glass

collectors are familiar with the handsome rummers engraved to

commemorate the opening of major bridges such as the Sunderland

bridge, the Scotswood bridge and the High Level bridge over the
rivers Tyne and Wear. However, other less notable bridges that

replaced toll bridges in the area are also remembered on glass;

among them the Seaton Sluice bridge, opened on 2nd May 1894.

Glasses commemorating the

Time Gun refer to a cannon,

sited on Ballast Hill at North
Shields, that had been regularly

fired by hand at 1.00 pm each

day until in 1863 it was
connected to the Edinburgh

Observatory from where it was

then regularly fired by
electricity until it was

discontinued in 1905. Although
both dates are recorded on

tumblers we believe that they

were both engraved at the time
of the final firing rather than 42

years apart.

A glass recording ‘The Man Who Broke the Bank at

Blyth 1894’ commemorates the activities of John Robinson who

became a person of some importance in Blyth. He ran several

businesses, made his mark in public life and was prominent in the

nonconformist church but he overreached himself when he started

the Blyth Deposit and Advance Bank, of which he was the sole
official, and which offered unusually high rates of interest. He

absconded with the assets, and was last seen locally on 13 February
1894 although he was later reported to be in France. The bank failed

and the depositors lost everything. I think that the engraver who
produced this glass probably had the song
“The man who broke the

bank at Monte Carlo”
in mind when he engraved it. One might

People

In Honour of Lord Warkworth

1895

The deaths of many individuals are recorded on these

insignificant glasses and investigation shows that, while many of

the people commemorated can be shown to have mining

connections, others have not which leads one to the conclusion that

their popularity must have been more widely rooted in the

community than any connection specific to coal mining.

The mining connection is clearly shown on a glass

inscribed
‘John Graham / Who Died March 29th 1885 / Through

an Accident at / Usworth Colliery / Nov 28th 1884’.
An inquest

was held when his family maintained that he had died as a result of

an accident at the colliery, four months earlier, but we can find no
record in the local press of an accident at the colliery at the

appropriate time. His death certificate records that he died of
natural causes, i.e., acute rheumatism and double pneumonia. Had

the accident claim been upheld, the family would have been entitled

to compensation from the mine owners so one might question the
impartiality of the doctor or the coroner..

Another example of how an inscription can be misleading

reads that Violet Smith died on 7 January 1882 at Seaham Colliery.

Although one might assume a mining connection she proved, in

fact, to be the wife of a police sergeant. Some of those recorded

were prominent in local society as was the case of Anthony Toole
who died of tuberculosis, aged 33, on 27 March 1895. The report in
The Morpeth Herald and Reporter reads
‘The deceased gentleman

was very well known and widely respected in the district, and held

various offices’.

National Events
It seems that, by about 1900, the fashion for these glasses

as local commemoratives was on the decline and for the remaining

years during which they were produced the engravers turned to
recording events that concerned the whole country as well as those

affecting the Northeast. Among the subjects covered were the Boer
War, the death of Queen Victoria, the coronation of Edward VII,

the sinking of the Titanic, and the First World War. This change

was also accompanied by a change in the style of engraving.

The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008
4

The War with England

1914
Death of Queen Victoria

1901

All Categories

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DI Other Mining B

El Non Mining Accident C

13 Local Records D

National Records E

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The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008

5
5
THE WHO, THE HOW AND THE WHERE

It is now clear that the so-called Disaster glasses must be

considered as only one group among the wider variety of

commemorative glasses that were popular in the Northeast. So,

when were they made, who produced them, what sort of market
were they made for and how were they acquired?

Bill Cowan and I have recorded one hundred and forty

inscriptions and, with about a dozen exceptions, they are all dated

between 1880 and 1916. The exceptions are dated from 1832 to
1862, but these inscriptions have all appeared on the same types of

glass as those in common use from 1880 onwards, and we can find

no evidence that the types of rather crude glass which account for

the majority of all the glasses dated from 1880 onwards were
already being produced as early as the 1830s and 1840s. It is
noticeable that all the glasses with earlier dates refer to events that

were, in one way or another, in the public domain while the earliest

glass referring to the death of an individual is dated 1882. It is our

belief that the glasses bearing early dates were made, during the

height of their popularity, to commemorate the 25th, 50th or 75th

anniversaries of the original events. The one event that creates a
problem in this chronology is the Hartley Colliery disaster of 1862.
This is close enough to 1880 to argue that the glasses used in the

main period could well have been in common use at that earlier
date. Until we find glasses recording events dated between 1862

and 1880 which we are confident are contemporary with those dates
(the death of a private person for example) we prefer to believe that
even the Hartley Colliery glasses were made to mark anniversaries.
This is perhaps borne out by a glass jug on which are recorded three

mine disasters from Hartley in 1862 to West Stanley in 1909.

We now believe that they were produced by a small group

of largely itinerant engravers, since we have oral evidence of an
engraver coming to the front door and receiving a commission to

engrave glasses with the names of the family children, of glasses

bought at a miner’s gala, and one offered to a member of a mine

rescue squad as a souvenir. A treadle-operated engraving machine

would not have been difficult to transport and set up at shows and
fairs. Equally, an engraver could arrive at the site of any major

public event, such as the opening of a new bridge, to produce
instant souvenirs.

Concluded on page 6

Inscriptions

using

Roman capitals begin to

appear, and in one case

that has come to our
notice, recording the

start of World War I,

both types of script are

employed.

The

latest

dates that have so far
come to light are for the

disaster at Woodhorn

Colliery, and the death
of Lord Kitchener; both
in 1916.

Sinking of the Titanic
1912

YOU HILL’? Readers’ Queries

A footless vase
One of our members, a collector of “Vaseline” glass for

many years, before we learnt to say “straw opalescent”, has two
Lily Vases, both in “pale blue opalescent”.

One is complete,
395mm tall, the stem
and bowl being 365mm.

(fig.1)

The other, 1050mm

from top of bowl down

to the brass ferrule at the
base of the stem, has an

unfortunate apology for

a foot
(fig.2)

They are both of

wonderful colour and
graceful design, possibly

from the same glass factory in the first

quarter of the 20th century.

The tall vase needs a correct foot

— see detail of foot of the smaller vase:-

Is there a foot out there, wishing to find a good home at

the base of this graceful stem and bowl, or perhaps a glass blower

who is up to the job of restoration?

2.

Venetian Vase?

Another member, seeing item 12,

object 1965.5 from Reading Museum (Cone
83, p. 15) wonders if any reader can hazard a

guess as to the date and origins of this vase.
Could it be late 19
th
Century

Venetian, is it Powell / Whitefriars, or is it

something completely different?

Does

another member own a similar vase, whether
or not its origins are known?

C
o

Disaster Glass
Im

es’ Continued:

Different engravers can be identified by their

idiosyncrasies of spelling, as in the case of the one who writes
`Wee’ for ‘We’ and ‘Hee’ for ‘He’. Another inscribes the word

Success as Succefs in the 18th century style. They can also be

distinguished by the way they form their letters; particularly the
capitals, as in the examples I illustrate. I estimate that there were

probably between four and six engravers at work during the whole
period when these glasses were popular.

John Brooks

The Glass Cone

Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008
3. “WINGOD SWEEP”

This fairly crude rummer with a folded foot, and the

inscription “WINGOD SWEEP” is a prvzle to the owner. His

initial assumption was that the cup was perhaps a prize in some
form of sweepstake. However it has been suggested that the

inscription refers to a chimney-sweep of that name who, in the early

years of the 19
th
Century, was convicted of stealing, received a

disproportionately harsh sentence, and became a
’cause celebre’.

An internet search has brought to light a James Wingod

sentenced at the Old Bailey for theft in 1817, but he was not a
sweep but a servant. The Sun Insurance records held in the
Guildhall Library disclose insurance in 1835 by Thomas Wingod,

“chimney sweeper”, but any felony by this gentleman has not been
found. Times-Online lists a King’s Bench case in 1836, Taylor v.
Wingod, but gives no detail. However the Sun Insurance records

suggest another possibility: in 1833 insurance was effected by

another “Thomas Wingod, of
‘The Sweep’
Wingods Place,

Halsden Green, Harrow Road, Middlesex, victualler”.

To us, and to John Brooks, the latter seems to offer the

most likely explanation—that the inscription refers to the owner

and his address, especially if as well as supplying victuals he was

also satisfying customers’ thirst.

Can anyone solve these mysteries?
Bob and Ruth Wilcock

The stories behind all the inscriptions I have quoted in

these two articles, together with many more, are

explored in more detail in a bookjust published:

An Alarming Accident, or Every Glass Tells a Story:

the forgotten engraved glass of North
East England.

By
John Brooks and William Cowan

Published by
Tyne Bridge Publishing

Price
£7.99

ISBN No 9781857951240

www.tynebridgepublishing.co.uk/

6

STEVEN LUNDBER

On the 11th June 2008,
following a short, but acute

illness, Jean Beebe, a
longstanding member and

staunch supporter of The

Glass Association (GA)
passed away.

Jean was married to Peter
for fifty two years. Peter

was a guiding light on the

GA committee as

Membership Secretary, &

and until very recently, the

NW

Regional

Representative.

Jean was Peter’s first girlfriend and likewise, Peter was

Jean’s first boyfriend. Meeting in their teens whilst living in

Peterborough, they struck gold first time and never cast a glance at

anyone else. A real “Peterborough effect”.

Jean originally worked in a pathology laboratory in

Peterborough. Once together with Peter she continued her
professional career at Booth Hall children’s hospital in Manchester.
Work was halted to have and look after her two daughters, Jane &

Susan; many of you will know Jane, a talented studio glassmaker.

Jean taught at primary and secondary level then when she

stopped teaching at school, Jean’s social activities centred on music

and collecting; a member of her church choir, and having studied
piano when younger, she took to teaching the instrument at home,

her students eager to learn at her hands; she was still teaching when

her illness struck.

Her collecting area was that of silver spoons. Peter relates

that Jean was given her first spoon, from Russia, by her Sunday

school teacher to mark her 21st birthday; the teacher had been a

governess to Prince Philip when in Corfu.

As with all good partnerships, Jean’s collecting bug

reached out to Peter and I well remember him sourcing silver

spoons during the GA trip to the USA a few years ago. In her turn,
Jean supported Peter in his glass collecting, and he reports that her

“eye” was the best.

Jean & Peter were great supporters of the GA events and

international trips, having come not only to all of the UK days and

weekends, but also to France, Belgium, The Czech Republic,

Venice, USA & Sweden. A down to earth and reserved lady she
was always good company. Jean’s
final days were spent rather

uncomfortably, going in and out of
hospital, but I know we’ll remember

her for her beaming smile.

I’d like to pass on Peter’s

thanks to you all for the thoughts,

memories and support that you’ve

given him For those purchasing the

Frank Thrower / Dartington DVD,
Jean is centred in the opening “crowd”

shot of the GA members in the

Dartington museum. A lasting
memory.

Brian Clarke

7
It is sad to have to report the death of master glassmaker

and paperweight specialist Steven Lundberg on April 12th after a
long and courageous fight against illness.

Born in 1953 he joined his brother James in his glass

studio after high school and college. This was in the early days of

studio glass, and James together with Mark Cantor, had built a
studio behind the house in San Jose, California. David Salazar who
lived next door, joined them as their apprentice, and they worked

under the title of Nouveau Glass, making Tiffany style glassware. A
meeting with Larry Selman introduced them to the world of

paperweights, from which point they eventually became one of the
leading paperweight studios. 1973 saw the birth of Lundberg
Studios in Davenport just South of San Francisco where Steven

became the second apprentice, to be followed shortly afterwards by
Daniel Salazar. Around this time Chris Buzzini also joined the

paperweight making team. The use of torchwork to create flowers

and leaves rather than by the more traditional use of lampwork was
developed by Lundberg Studios, and the technique is continued

today at the studio by Daniel Salazar.

In the early 1980’s David Salazar and Chris Buzzini left to

set up their own studios, and brother James was killed in a
motorcycle accident in 1992. Steven remained as head of the studio

and started to do collaborative works with the majority of the other
well known paperweight makers, producing some of his finest

pieces of art glass. 1977 saw the departure of Steven from
Lundberg Studios and along with his wife Ola and son Justin he
established Steven Lundberg Contemporary Art Glass in Santa

Cruz.

During the planning and management of a final
move to a new facility in Oregon he was given

only three years to live which he managed
double before time caught up with him. Justin

was able to see the relocation to completion and
took over as the new master glassmaker, with
Steven adding the benefit of his skills and many

years of experience in the world of glassmaking.

As well as helping to develop a unique style of
glassmaking, he left this world in a unique way,

with an-e-mail to friends and family that he

wrote just before the end and which was then

sent shortly afterwards. This has since been
forwarded around the

three-layer Steven Lundberg
world.

fish weight dated 1987

Richard Giles

The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008

A GLORIOUS SUMMER ..

Night Flight
by

Patricia Hilton-Robinson

Photo by Lisa O’Neill

Hope by Emma Butler-Cole litken1

Art in Action 2008
“Best of the Best”

Blue Vase—fish and port by Margaret Burke

(Broken Dreams
by Phil
Vickery in
the background)

Photo by Lisa O’Neill

The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Summer 2008
8

Sars-Poteries Glass Museum,

Northern France

reflected in
“Light Trap, 2006”

by
Vladimir Zbynovsky

Single figure bather

wall plaque by Sly Glass

Photo by John Westmoreland

Kathryn Wightman (close-up)

zoto by David Williams
Vial Vessel VII

Recycled pharmaceutical glass, fused

and slumped by
Jude Stoll

Photo by John Westmoreland

9
The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008

THE

18T CENTURY ENGLISH DRINKING GLASS al

An era of fashion, of style, of wit and appearances. Even

the lowly downstairs staff and the waifs of the burgeoning cities
dreamt of “making their fortune”. Most were aware of manners and
mannerisms and many strove to attain a higher status. Into this

world, a precursor of Thatcherism, was born that translucent grey
metal, molten when in a furnace and solid when at room
temperature; soft and yet hard, able to be blown and worked into a

myriad of forms. The fascination of glass had arrived and
blossomed with the growth of the merchant classes. Mrs .Jones

“had to have” and it had to be better than her neighbours.

The elegance of the times drove the creation of those

wonderfully shaped vessels: to hold in your hands the perfection of
form of the best of the drinking glasses of the era, to put your lips to

the soft rounded edges of the bowls and sip your wine or ale, turned
the most ordinary liquor into an elixir.

That fascination, that delight, that feeling of holding and

using a masterful piece of human creation, is still with us today. It
is the joy that drives the collector of 18
th
century English drinking

glasses.

This first article will, with the help of pictures, just

introduce the basics of collecting these glasses. I acknowledge the

many works of those who endeavoured to classify the glasses, but

will not mention names for the fear of missing out someone
important. I wish to keep things simple, so that others may enjoy the

delights of collecting in this field.

The classification of drinking glasses refers to the three

main areas of the glass:
1.
The Bowl

2.
The Stem

3.
The Foot

Additional features worthy of note are:
4.
The Colour

5.
Decoration

Colour would normally apply to the whole glass and

decoration could be to either bowl, or stem or foot as well as to the

whole glass.

6.
The Use

Collectors and classifiers of 18
th

century glass, using

“shorthand”, often refer to a glass by the liquor that it was designed

to hold. Thus a Wine, a Dram or a Firing Glass.

The last “buzz” word to grasp, is:

7.
The Metal

This applies to the substance that the whole glass is made

from — not just the “metallic” trace ingredients but to the total mix.

With these “glass words”, you can talk about the glasses

that you’ve seen or own, can compare the similarities and the
differences and go a long way to dating the examples in front of

you. We’re starting off with a few examples of very simple yet
iconic designs of the 18
th
century glass.

The Bowl:
Bowl sizes were very varied, as were shapes. The basic

shape is the
Drawn Trumpet.

This is formed when the bowl and

stem of the glass are made from the same gather of glass; the
combination of blowing the bowl and pulling out (drawing) the

stem gives rise to the trumpet shape of the bowl. As evident in the
examples 3 through 10, the bowl can be narrow or wide, squat or
tall, thick or thin. Figs.

1 &

2 are variations on the shape of the

drawn trumpet, where the bowl has been given a waist. From its

shape, that in fig. 2 would be given the name of a “Thistle Bowl”
whilst 1 would be an “Elongated Thistle Bowl”. Look carefully

though at 1 and 2 and you can see that there is a join between the
bowl and the stem, they were made separately and joined together

whilst hot.

The Stem:

The stems shown are all
Plain

Stems,
the simplest to make yet

perhaps the most elegant — letting

the design of the glass speak alone.

Again, the stems can be slender or
thick, tall or short — the Firing Glass,
fig. 4, has almost lost its stem,

whereas the Toasting Glass, fig. 3,

seems to be all stem. Also look at the wobbly nature of the stems in
6, 7 & 10, whereas the others, especially apparent in 5, are almost

ruler-straight sided. The thistle bowled glass, fig. 2, introduces a
further variation — a small “bump” or knop of glass between the

stem and the bowl; here it is a discrete piece of glass, added when
molten to enable the join of stem to bowl.

The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008

10

Hope by Emma Butler-Cole Aitken

Art in Action
2008

“Best of the Best”

Sars-Poteries Glass Museum,
Northern France

reflected in
“Light Trap, 2006”

by Vladimir Zbynovsky

Blue Vase—fish and port by Margaret Burke

(Broken Dreams by Phil Vickery
in the background)

Photo by Lisa O’Neill

Waveform by Graham Muir
Single figure bather

wall plaque by Sly Glass

Photo by John Westmoreland

Northern Glass at the Platform Gallery, Clitheroe

“I am” poo Kathryn Wightman (close-up)
hoto by David Williams
Vial Vessel VII

Recycled pharmaceutical glass, fused

and slumped
by Jude Stoll

Photo by John Westmoreland

The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Summer 2008
9

8
The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008

A LO 0 SUMMER

Night Flight by Patricia Hilton-Robinson
Photo by Lisa O’Neill
GLASS !

The Foot:

Most often added as a

separate item to the stem, they were

all “conical” — that is their centres

were raised from the surrounding
part of the foot. In the making, the

glass was held by the glassmaker at
the centre of the base of the foot with

an iron rod, the “punty rod”; when
this was finally cracked off, a sharp

lump of glass was left under the foot;

in order not to scratch the table tops,

this centre had a raised design.
Figs.5, 5A, & 8 show an additional
design idea, the centre of the feet

were domed — to give a pleasing
form, these glasses had the diameters

of the feet made the same as the
diameter of the top of the bowl. Fig

4A shows a thick foot for the firing
glass, used for hammering on the
table following a toast, whereas the

thin plain foot and stem of the

toasting glass, fig.3A was designed to be broken after a toast 1A,
2A, and 5A show the practice of

folding the foot; whilst still molten,

the rim of the foot was turned under

(rarely turned upwards) — this gave a
very strong rim to the foot and
helped prevent breakage of these

valuable glasses.
commemorative glass, with a rose, two buds an oak leaf and the

word “Fiat” engraved. The bowl of

fig.10 is telling you what it was
intended for: with the design of hops

& barley, a strong ale would have
been drunk from this glass.

The Use:
We’ve been talking about decoration
pointing the way to usage, but the

bowl size and weight of the glass
would also give an indication. Thus
there were glasses designed for Ale,

for Wine, Champagne, Ratafia,

Drams for strong liquor and the

(above) examples of Toasting and
Firing glasses.

The Metal:
Whether George Ravenscroft did or

did not “invent” lead glass, he
certainly realized its revolutionary

nature and gained the Patent for its

manufacture. It is the lead content

that imparts that soft brilliance to the 18
th
century glass. Tiny air

bubbles and inclusions from the
furnace are also part of recognizing
a

glass from the era. The swirls and
eddies, like frozen “waves” and

striations are also part of the beauty
of the 18
th
century glass.

Colour:
Early in the 18th century,

the colour was a fluid grey, taken
from the high lead content. Due to

impurities or additives to improve

the metal mix, the glass can have a

slight yellow, bluish or pale pink tint.

Decoration:
Plain stems and bowls have been chosen

the examples, except for fig.9, a Jacobean

2A

3,‘
Finally:

To know the glass you have to hold
it; all collectors and dealers in 18
th

Century glass would be delighted to
share the tactile pleasures of their

Brian Clarke

To be continued with further examples of bowls

and stems.

The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008

11
ass with you.

AP

RWEIGHT C

COMMEMORATIVE PAPERWEIGHTS PART 1
Since the early 1970’s when our interest in glass started to

develop, one aspect of collecting that has always appealed is that of
commemorative items. This is primarily because their production

can be traced back to a specific event and time in history. In

compiling this article, I have deliberately excluded all royalty-

related weights, due to the large number produced by the likes of

Caithness Glass and others for every possible event during the latter
20
th
and early 21
st

Centuries. Also excluded are sulphide weights

that just include a portrait, because other than a few exceptions, they

commemorate the person in general, rather than a specific event,

plus personalised commemorative weights made ‘out of hours’ by

glassmakers for friends and family.

Considering the length of time since the introduction of

paperweights and events that have happened, there appear to be
surprisingly few events commemorated in glass generally and in the
form of paperweights even fewer. The various jubilees, coronations

and weddings that happened during the latter part of Queen
Victoria’s long reign were commemorated with all sorts of items in

press moulded glass, but to my knowledge the only paperweight

relating to any of these events was the one produced by the

Sowerby company for the 1887 Jubilee showing the usual jubilee

portrait. It has not been my intention to produce a definitive list of

events that have been commemorated, and I am sure that there will

be some readers out there who know of other events that I have not
mentioned for which paperweights have been produced. If so I

would welcome the information. The article is based around the
knowledge of events that I have gained from research related to

specific weights in my collection.

To my knowledge the first weight commemorating a

specific event was a scrambled millefiori weight attributed to Pietro
Bigaglia that has both 1845 and 1847 date canes plus another cane

with the inscription ‘ LX Congresso Degli Scienziati in Venezia 47′.
According to Paul Holister in his
Encyclopaedia of Glass

Paperweights,
this event was held in Venice in 1847, and was the

last of a series of scientific gatherings. The only known example of

this weight is in the Bergstrom Mahler Museum collection in USA.
during my research 1 came across a list of all the major exhibitions

that have been held since the first one in London in 1756. I was

amazed at the number on the list, over 200, the majority of which

were during the latter half of the 19
th
Century and first third of the

20
1

Century. Whether or not paperweights were produced for all

these events will probably remain a mystery, but as I progressed

with this article I came to realise that most of my commemorative

weights from this
period relate to

exhibitions. I have one

other sulphide weight.
It
commemorates the

1878

Exposition

Universelle
in
Paris,

(2) and contains a
circular plaque with an

image of the buildings,

most likely taken from

a
mould from a

medallion that would

have been made for the

event.

My first example of a weight using a glass blank with

paper backing, is a print of an etching showing the general site and

buildings of the
Irish Industrial Exhibition

held in
Cork
in

1852

(3).
This was at a time of mass emigration to the USA and other

parts of the world so one assumes that it was held to promote the

prospects for Irish workers in the hope that it might persuade them
not to leave.

Instead of a paper print the next type of weight used a

paper backed transfer of coloured pen and ink type drawings, and

my first example commemorates the
1862 International

Exhibition of Trade and Industry (4)
which was held from May

to November in South Kensington, London. To date I have been

unable to find out if this type of weight was around in 1851;

weights can be found showing views of the Crystal Palace, but they
are of the building when it had been relocated from Hyde Park to

Sydenham in South East London, but even so would probably pre-

Probably of no surprise to anyone is that the earliest event

that I have commemorated is the
1851 Crystal Palace Exhibition

(1).
The weight contains a sulphide plaque showing the main

frontage of the Crystal Palace building. The sulphide is marked

“A.B.
A PARLS”,
so one can assume that the weight itself was made

in France but the precise identity of the maker remains unknown.

There is a fair amount of detail recorded about this exhibition, and
date the 1862 weight. I have three other weights of this type, the

first relates to the International Exhibition of Industry, Science and

Art held in Edinburgh in 1886, the second to the Manchester Jubilee

Exhibition of 1887 held to celebrate the Golden Jubilee of Queen

Victoria, and finally the Glasgow International Exhibition of 1888.
This latter exhibition is somewhat unusual as not only was it held

specifically to show off the city’s achievements and to emphasise its

The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008

12

position as Britain’s second city but also to raise finance for the

building of a new art gallery and museum. All three weights show
illustrations of the exhibition buildings but exactly where these type

of weights were made remains a mystery. Some clues point to the
continent, possibly Germany, other opinions include the

manufacturing of the glass blanks abroad with the picture added

here. Some examples of these and later souvenir weights can be

found with a label but the ones I have seen relate to the retailer not
the manufacturer. Souvenir weights like these were produced for

every place in the UK that might be considered worth visiting, I

think that they are quite attractive and the format lasted through to

the late 1880s when the use of photographs and more modem type

illustrations overtook them.

One of the first events to use these more modem type

illustrations was the
World’s Fair
or to give it its correct title the

World’s Columbian Exposition held in
Chicago

in
1893
to

commemorate the 400th anniversary of the arrival of Columbus in

America. The exhibition ran for six months and was visited by
27 million people, nearly half the population of America at that

time. Buildings featured include the Mines Building, the
Manufacturers Liberal Art Building (5),
the Cold Storage House

and the Ferris Wheel.
complex was built in 1907 by Imre Kiralfy, and the stadium was

used to host the 1908 Olympics, but to date I have not seen any

The next two weights commemorate both an exhibition

and an individual, the event is the
1901 Pan American Exhibition
weights commemorating this event. The 1914 weight features a

coloured print of the crossed flags of both participating nations.

1918/19 saw the end of hostilities between USA and

Japan and I found a pair of weights featuring pictures of the two

heads of state,
Marquis Saionji (9)

and
President Woodrow

Wilson (10)
surrounded by the words Memorial to Peace’, and

presumably of American manufacture. The USA and Japan had

been at loggerheads over the ownership of the Chinese mainland
territory of Shandong granted to Germany in 1897, plus certain

German administered pacific islands that Japan had occupied at the

outbreak of World War 1. Despite strong opposition from America,
Japan’s claim was ratified by the Treaty of Versailles in 1919.

1929 saw the
North

East Exhibition (11)
held at Exhibition

Park Newcastle, the

site of the 1887 Royal
Jubilee Exhibition. It

ran from May to

October and was
opened by the Prince

of Wales, later to be
Edward VIII. The weight illustrates the improvements in the use of

photography, and comprises a good quality sepia photograph
showing a night-time shot of a floodlit
Main Avenue.
The last

weight with an exhibition theme is a print of an illustration of the
Federal Building at the Chicago World’s Fair (12).
The weight is

undated, but the

buildings illustrated are
obviously

early

20
th
Century, so as there

were no other large fairs
held in Chicago it must
relate to the
Century of

Progress International
Exhibition
held in
1933.

It opened on May 27
th

and one of the highlights was a visit by the German airship Graf
Zeppelin on October 26
th

although the visit was not welcomed by

all Americans because of the situation in Europe at that time. The
fair was due to close on November 12
th
but was so successful that it

was retained and opened again from May 26
th
to October 31
se

1934.

This appears to be one of the last of the souvenir type

commemorative weights, and next time I will deal with some other
types of weights that were produced for a diverse variety of other
events in the 20
th
Century.

Richard M Giles

held in Buffalo, New York State

and the

individual is
President William H McKinley (6).
He was shot on

the 6th September 1901 whilst in the
Temple of Music (7)

building

at the exhibition and died eight days later on the 14
th

September.

One weight uses an early
photograph of the building

with inset picture of the
President, the second is a

portrait of the President with
details of his shooting and

death underneath.

From

1901 we move on to the
1914 Anglo—American

Exhibition (8)
held at the

White City exhibition

grounds in London. This

13
The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008

The inspired fish tank display

The weekend event on 12 & 13 July was built around the

opening of the exhibition of the collection of Czech glass
(“sklo”)
of

Dr. Graham Cooley. As with the previous event held at the King’s
Lynn Art Centre exhibiting Graham’s collection of the work of

Ronald Stennett-Willson, this promised to be ground breaking.

After an interesting and informative introductory talk by

Graham we were treated to a private view of the exhibition, where

we found a cross-section of Czechoslovak glass running from the

1950s through to the 1980s. The collection was so big that the

pressed glass examples, or Sklo Union pieces, were given their own

space in a separate room (The Red Barn).

In the earlier tradition of

Czech glass exhibitions, there was

also an installation of spill vases
(or
solifleurs)

taking a large part of

Part of the Sklo Union display
with the eye-catching

installation of spill vases

one end wall of the Red Barn, with some 200 versions of these
Bohemian vases from various factories set out on the shelves. It

gave a different meaning to these oft overlooked pieces and one

was able to compare heights, colours and especially the shape of the
coloured bases, as well as the display being an artwork in its own
right.

In this display room there were glazed table cabinets with

original source material, including open copies of the Czech Glass

Review, the main reference material used for identifying the glass
in the exhibition. The whole length of one wall was taken up by a

display of the range of pressed glass, grouped by designer, and
identified on the shelf This made one review one’s feelings about

pressed glass, since these are totally of the period, with their abstract

designs, and overturn any previous conceptions about the subject

being traditionally Victorian. There was even a later ceramic

example of the so called Hobnail Vase, originally designed by
Rudolf Jurnikt

to compare the

different
treatments using

the respective

materials.

T h e

layout of the
Shakespeare

Barn, the main
room of the

exhibition, made
the

already

interesting and

The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008
vibrant items very accessible, since one could look at many of them

in the round by being able to walk around the whole of the central

display.

There were two more installations in this room, a very eye

catching backlit wall of thin, mould blown vases with varied finish

treatments, creating a vibrancy that any interior designer could not
fail to notice. At the opposite end of the room was a large fish tank

which had both glass fish, by Josef Rozinek and Stanislav Honzik,
and real fish in it, with tall knobbly vases in greens and browns
grouped to give the effect of water weed (which the real fish find
quite fascinating). It was an inspired idea calculated to make one
look.

The glass in this room ran around the room in a broadly

chronological way, beginning with `Harrtir glass from the mid-

1950s, with shapes designed by Milan Metelak, and going through

opaque flashed and cut pieces with painted panels, that were shown
in the International Brussels Exposition of 1958. Immediately after

this group were pieces that have long been mis-attributed as

Murano, but were in fact designed by Frantisek Zemek in the mid-
to late-1950s. The fish tank was surrounded by pieces by Vladimir
Jelinek designed in the 1960’s, and followed by a display of cast

pieces by Jan Cerny and Jiri Ryba. These cast items are the biggest
clue toward the way Czech glass was to go, since the Czech

Republic is now known especially for its affinity with monumental
cast pieces of glass sculpture.

Then came the long wall of two shelves which supported

a huge number of coloured blown vessels, some of which were also
cut, such as those by Pavel Hlava, Oldrich Lipsky (previously

mistaken as

Hlava items),

and Ladislav
Oliva. Blown

work designed
by Emanuel and

Jan Beranek, Jan
Gabrhel, Josef

Hospodka,

Miroslav

Klinger, Jan

Kotik, Frantisek

Koudelka, Milan
Metelak, Jiri

Suhajek,

14

And you thought they

were Murano—

Pieces by Josef Hospodka for the Chribska glassworks

Miroslava Svobodova, and Frantisek Vizner provided answers to
many questions posed over the years, where items have been

variously been attributed to Italy and Germany.

Moving on around the room and passing the optic range

installation there was a wall of amazing and innovative cut glass,

that in the main could only have emanated from the hand of Czech
designers. The abstract nature of the designs and the complexity of

much of the cutting is synonymous with that region and one could

not help being aware of the huge tradition that precedes these
pieces. The three designers associated with these vessels are Josef

Pravec, Josef Svarc and Vladimir Zahour; unfortunately it has been

Impossible to add to these names as many of the illustrations used in

the Czech Glass Review omit their names. At the end of these
shelves were three pieces by the internationally renowned engraver,
Jiri Harcuba, which are the only examples of work by Harcuba on

vessels and which were made and engraved while he was at the
Royal College of Arts in the 1960s. –

The final part of the exhibition was given over to lamp

work examples by Vera Liskova which were mixed with the only

painted (or enamelled) examples in the show. The scarcity of these

pieces was underlined by the fact that there were so few examples
on show, and they were all the more welcome for that. Finally there

were six clear pieces with largely abstract engraved decoration

designed by Dagmar Kudrova.

After lunch we were treated to a talk by Dan Klein who

regaled us with his in-depth knowledge of this oft overlooked area

of glass making and collecting. He began by proposing his five
greatest glass influences of the twentieth century, including the two

Czech designers, Stanislav Libensky and Miroslav Brychtova.
These two designers, who were married, took us from the 1950s

into the contemporary, or Studio Movement. Moreover, their work

underlined how cast glass became so important within the Czech
glass canon; Dan discussed the way Brychtova constructed huge
cast glass sculptures, and their impact upon other designers. There
followed a short examination of designer/makers bringing us

through to the present.

Then followed an interesting and informative discussion

between Dan and Graham about collecting, in which the audience

Graham Cooley and Dan Klein during

their fascinating discourse on collecting
could

participate. This gave us a
fleeting insight into both

protagonists’ way of collecting. There were comments by Graham

about averaging the costs of collecting, by both buying the bargains

that appear, as well as taking top-priced pieces (often other
examples are never seen again) then simply average the price. This

brought us to the inevitable: value and investment, and why one

really collects — or indeed why one should collect and even, when

and how to sell. There were some answers, but ultimately it is all

down to the individual collector.

As GA members, we were incredibly lucky to have

Graham Cooley, and Dan Klein, to take us through the whys and

wherefores of Czech glass, but one was aware that without that

privilege one was confronted with an extraordinary and colourful

collection in a vacuum. It has to be said that the display would have

benefitted from Information Boards (however brief), but Mark
Hill’s book proved an invaluable aid.

In this writer’s view, this was a very important exhibition;

since it is the first time that Czech factory-produced glass has been
looked at in its full and varied production, from the top to bottom of

types of production, previous exhibitions having looked at the top
end almost exclusively. The aim of showing the collectable and

approachable along with top-end examples was certainly achieved

and points toward a large collecting area, with the possibility to
concentrate on one designer, one style of work (such as pressed
items, cut, or blown glass), or, of course, making a single

representative collection.

Thanks are due to Graham Cooley, Mark Hill, Dan Klein,

and Liz Falconbridge and her team at King’s Lynn for facilitating
such an important occasion for the Glass Association.

Nigel Benson

It
is impossible in the space available in the Cone to

illustrate all the glass referred to in the text. Readers are

recommended to turn to Mark Hill’s profusely illustrated book
which is an indispensible guide:

Hi Sklo Lo Sklo:
Czech Glass Design

From Masterpiece to

Mass-Produced

148 pages, softback; Price: £20

ISBN-10: 0-9552865-3-0;

ISBN-13: 978-0-9552865-3-7

www.markhillpublishing.com
To purchase, e-mail
boolcs(&,markhillpublishing.com
or telephone

+44 (0) 7798 915474

The background to the exhibition, and Graham Cooley ‘s reflections

on Czech glass
are set out in an

interview by

Jeanette
Hayhurst in
Cone 83, pp. 5-8.

The photo aside

shows Jeanette

with the dish by
Josef Svarc that
Graham covets
.

Hi Sklo Lo Sklo

111.0
14

I IP

The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008

15

/ hiairithdah

We are delighted to announce that new committee

member Jackie Fairburn has organized an inaugural meeting of the
Glass Association, Northern Branch, to re-open the Northern
Frontiers, and of course further afield: members from across the

borders are equally welcome!


Date:

Saturday 11
th

October from 2 – 4 pm.


Venue:

Worsley Church Hall, Just offJunction 13 M60,

convenient for the Motorway Network. The hall is 50 yards
from the Church at the junction of the A577/A575. There is

ample free parking, and bus services from Manchester,
Bolton, Wigan & Leigh pass the church.


Presentation:

“A Celebration of British & Continental Cut

Glass from the middle of the 20
th

Century”
given by

Maurice Wimpory, our Treasurer.

This will be followed by tea / coffee & biscuits and a session

of “show & tell”. Please bring a favourite piece of glass &
tell us what you do or do not know about it.


Admission:

6 per person . We look forward to seeing as

many of you as possible. Friends are also welcome .


Booking: If

you haven’t already booked, please send your

cheque to:

Mrs J A Fairburn . Wing Cottage, 10 Wiswell Lane, Whalley,

Clitheroe, BB7 9AF.

Prlhilhg vglqh ]I

— 18th and 25th October 2008

An opportunity to learn how to incorporate high-

resolution photographs, graphics and typography into glass and

ceramic work. This is a course over two weekends, run by glass

artist
Louis Thompson

and printmaker
Shelley James

at
Peter

Layton’s London Glassblowing Workshop.
A small group of up

to eight students take initial ideas through to finished pieces in glass,

to explore a range of creative and technical possibilities.

Please contact Sylvie Marks for further information and to

book. Cost is £300 per person.

London Glassblowing Workshop, 7 The Leathermarket,
Weston Street, London SE1 3ER

Tel: 0207 403 2800 Fax: 0207 403 7778

Email: [email protected]
Web: www.londonglassblowing.co.uk
British Society Of Master Glass

Painters

Members Exhibition.

Until 28
th

November at the Cochrane Theatre

Gallery, Southampton Row, London, Mon-Fri 10:00-5.30 for

weekend opening times contact the Cochrane Gallery:

www.cochranetheatre.co.uk Tel: 01643 862 807.

Email: secretaryAbsmgyi.org.uk Website: www.bsmgp.org.uk

This is an excellent venue for stained glass, very near

Holborn tube station.

se

KeIko MukaIde Installation.
Until 2
nd

November at St. Mary’s Church, York.

Using fire, water, glass, stone and light, Kellco transforms the
interior of the church, creating a spiritual space in which to reflect

on the memory of loved ones.
See www.yorkstmarys.org.uk/Page/Installation.aspx

Email: ke i [email protected]

h11)11161

ht

[kAt

uni
9
‘iyoadfic;jc]


se

Until 25 January 2009:
Michael Harris: Studio Pioneer

An exhibition of Michael’s work at Mdina Glass and Isle

of Wi
g
ht Glass.

Until Spring 2009:
The Danger of the Image:

Glass Dresses by Diana Dias-Ledo

In addition to dresses a debut collection of jewellery by

Diana Dias-Ledo and a diverse range of jewellery by

selected artists are also on show in the exhibition.

Broadfield House Glass Museum, Compton Drive, Kingswinford,
West Midlands, DY6 9NS. Tel. 01384 812745

Open every Tuesday – Sunday 12 noon – 4pm.

www.dudley.gov.uldleisure-and-culture/museums—
g
alleries/

g
lass-museum

Katharine Coleman Solo Exhibition.
Until 4
th

October at Contemporary Applied Arts,

2 Purcy St London WI. Mon-Sat 10:00

6:00 .

Tel: 020 7436 2344. Fax. 020 7436 2446.04/10/08.

Email: salesAcaa.or2.uk Website: www.caa.or2.uk

MING

EV

46t0


Cambridge:

Sunday 21
st
September, 10:30-4 pm

Chilford Hall, Linton, Cambridge, CB21 4LE

Foyer Exhibition: Sklo Union pressed glass
from the

Marcus Newhall
collection.

Tel: 07887 762872

E-mail: oxbridgefairsanol.com


Gaydon:
Sunday 9
th

November, 10:00-4 pm

Heritage Motor Centre, Banbury Road, Gaydon,

Warwickshire, CV35 OBJ

Book launch:

Sklo Union Art Before Industry:

20th Century Czech Pressed Glass
by Czech glass

specialist
Marcus Newhall

who will be signing copies.

Tel: 01260 271975

E-mail: [email protected]

icc]lt]

at New Ashgate Gallery, Wagon Yard, Farnham GU9 7PS


Until 4 October:
Summer Showcase

including
Stuart Akroyd


Until 1
st

November:
Rarefmd Autumn Jewellery & Craft

including
‘Sanders & Wallace Glassmakers’
(Andrew

Sanders & David Wallace)

Tel: 01252 713208

e-mail galleryanewashgate.org.uk

www
newash
gs
te or
g
uk

hrbugh Ua-s-

fit’

Adam Aaronson, Lucy Batt, Janet Hodcroft, Max Jacquard,
Martin Birk Moller & Naoko Sato.

Until 1
S

` November, at ZeST Contemporary Glass Gallery,

Roxby Place, London SW6 IRS. Tel: 020 7610 1900.
33’7

The Glass Cone—Issue No: 84 Autumn 2008
16