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Olive Green Venetian and Chrome Yellow Venetian
Olive Green Venetian and Chrome Yellow Venetian

Olive Green Venetian and Chrome Yellow Venetian

Object Name2 Sculptural Vessels
Artist Dale Chihuly (American, b. 1941)
Assistant Lino Tagliapietra (Italian, b. 1934)
Made FromGlass
Date1988
Place MadeUnited States, WA, Seattle
TechniqueBlown, hot-worked
SizeSee Individual Records
Accession Number89.4.9
Credit LineGift of the artist
Curatorial Area(s)
Not On View
Interpretive Notes
Dale Chihuly was the first American studio glass artist to travel to Murano to observe Venetian glassmaking techniques. He worked at the Venini glassworks for months in 1969, learning techniques that had been carefully guarded for centuries. Ten years later, Chihuly and Benjamin Moore invited the Italian master glassblower Lino Tagliapietra to teach at Pilchuck Glass School near Seattle, Washington. Because Tagliapietra formed his glass in traditional ways, Chihuly did not think a collaboration with him would be successful. Then, on a trip to Venice in 1988, Chihuly saw a collection of Italian glass from the 1920s and 1930s. He wanted to experiment with some of sculptural forms characteristic of the glass of that period, and he contacted Tagliapietra. Together, they began what would become one of Chihuly's best-known series: the "Venetians." This pair of vessels is from the first experimental blow of "Venetians" that they made together.
Physical DescriptionColorless, olive-green, yellow glass; blown with hot applications.
Provenance
Source Dale Chihuly (American, b. 1941)
Object copyright© Dale Chihuly