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goblet
goblet

goblet

Object NameGoblet
Made FromLead Glass
Dateabout 1720
Place MadeEngland
TechniqueBlown, applied
SizeOverall H: 21.7 cm; Rim Diam: 9.8 cm
Accession Number79.2.122
Credit LineBequest of Jerome Strauss
Curatorial Area(s)
Exhibitions
Striking Innovation in British Glass
Drinking Glasses Through the Ages
On ViewThe Jerome and Lucille Strauss Study Gallery
Interpretive Notes
The baluster was a type of English drinking glass made in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Its stem was in the form of a baluster, a short vertical support with a circular section and a vase-like outline. This motif, adopted from Renaissance architecture, had been employed on early 17th-century Venetian glasses. Balusters were first made in England shortly after George Ravenscroft introduced his lead glass, and they became very popular. The stems of these heavy glasses contained knops and air traps that reflected and refracted light. Inverted baluster stems, which resembled the Venetian glasses, were made until 1710. For the next 25 years, true baluster stems were in demand. Knops, which were arranged in various ways, were found on a wide range of objects, including candlesticks as well as drinking and dessert glasses.
Physical DescriptionGoblet. Colorless lead glass; blown, applied. Round funnel bowl with bubble in base; stem composed of a pair of opposing balusters, each with air bubble, separated by a disk; domed and folded foot; rough pontil mark on underside.
Provenance
Source Jerome Strauss (1893-1978) - 1979-03-22
Former Collection Christie's, Paris - 1969-01-14
(Christie's, Jan. 14, 1969, lot 94)

There are no works to discover for this record.