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Wishglasses
Wishglasses

Wishglasses

Object NameJoined Wineglasses with Base
Artist Sara Musselman (American, b. 1976)
Assistant Ben Ahlgrim
Assistant Jeremy Friedly
Studio Through the Fire Studio
Made FromGlass, Plastic
Date2010
Place MadeUnited States, PA, Columbia
TechniqueBlown, hot-worked
Size(a) H: 22.6 cm, W: 16 cm, D: 7.2 cm; (b) H: 1.7 cm, W: 22.9 cm, D: 12.8 cm
Accession Number2010.4.63
Curatorial Area(s)
On ViewContemporary Art + Design, Design Gallery
Interpretive Notes
The wish glasses were designed to be used for a single special toast, and then broken apart at the top of the joined stems, “sealing” the wish. Over the past decade, changes in the market and the economy have forced many large glassworks to redirect their focus, to reinvent their products, or to close. For high-end glass design, a new direction in production and marketing is beginning to emerge. Designers, such as Sara Musselman, are looking at alternative sources for manufacturing. For glass, these sources include artist-glassblowers, whose studios are equipped to handle limited-edition production.
Physical DescriptionColorless glass, plastic base; blown, hot-worked. (a) Pair of wineglasses with applied curved stem; bases of two stems joined together. (b) Opaque white plastic rectangular base with ground oval-shaped flat center on which the wineglasses rest.
Provenance
Source Heller Gallery - 2010-06-08
vessel
50-99
basket
Dale Chihuly
1979
percolator
Corning Glass Works, Main Plant, "B" Factory
1938-1947
prototype
Corning Glass Works, Main Plant, "B" Factory
about 1949
Tiberius 826
Werner Bunek
1976
percolator
Corning Glass Works, Main Plant, "B" Factory
1938-1947