beaker
Object NameCovered Beaker on Ball Feet
Made FromNon-lead glass, Silver, Gilding
Dateabout 1700
Place Madepossibly Southern Germany (glass); Germany, Augsburg (mounts)
TechniqueBlown, pattern-molded, engraved, cut, gilt
SizeOverall H: 23.4 cm
Accession Number79.3.308
Credit LineGift of The Ruth Bryan Strauss Memorial Foundation
Curatorial Area(s)
Exhibitions
Glass Drinking Vessels from the Strauss Collection
Drinking Glasses Through the Ages
Glass of the Alchemists: Lead Crystal-Gold Ruby, 1650–1750
On ViewEuropean Gallery
Interpretive NotesJohann Kunckel (about 1632-1703) invented gold ruby glass between 1678 and 1685. Friedrich Wilhelm III, elector of Brandenburg, supported this German scholar and chemist in his attempts to develop new varieties of luxury glass at the glasshouse in Potsdam-Drewitz, near Berlin. There, Kunckel made gold ruby glasses using a complex process that required a separate furnace and expensive raw materials. As a reward for his success, the elector gave him Peacock Island on the river Havel, where Kunckel built his own glassworks in 1685. This factory was destroyed by fire three years later, and Kunckel’s glassmaking career never revived. Although gold ruby glass was always a luxury, it was soon being made by other glasshouses. One of them was located in southern Germany, possibly around Nuremberg, but its exact location has not been identified. The deep color of gold ruby glasses provided a fine background for bold cutting and restrained engraving.
polished pontil mark surrounded by ring of engraved dots separated with sprigs. On cover, three engraved bunches of fruit joined by foliate sprays.
Provenance
Source
Ruth Bryan Strauss Memorial Foundation
probably 1525-1575
1606