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vase

Object NameFooted Goblet or Vase
Designer Josef Hoffmann (Austrian, 1870-1956)
Maker Meyr’s Neffe Glassworks (1862-1922)
Retailer Wiener Werkstätte (1903-1932)
Made FromLead Glass
Date1916
Place MadeAustria, Vienna; probably Bohemia, Vimperk (Adolf bei Winterberg)
TechniqueBlown into mold, ground, polished
SizeOverall H: 19.7 cm; Rim Diam (max): 12.2 cm
Accession Number74.3.24 E
Curatorial Area(s)
Exhibitions
The Tradition of the Avant-Garde: Bohemian Glass 1820-1935
Glass of the Architects: Vienna, 1900-1937
On ViewModern Gallery
Interpretive Notes
The Viennese architect and designer Josef Hoffmann (1870-1956) deplored the poor quality of mass-produced objects. His preference for well-crafted everyday wares echoed the aims of the earlier Arts and Crafts movement in England. Hoffmann, who belonged to the avant-garde group of Austrian artists known as the Vienna Sezession, founded the Wiener Werkstätte (Vienna Workshop) in 1903. It produced all kinds of decorative arts, from jewelry to complete room decorations. Vienna’s Die Fledermaus (The Bat), designed by Hoffmann and others in 1907, is one of the Wiener Werkstätte’s most recognized interiors. Inspired by artistic cabarets in Paris and Munich, it promoted the Werkstätte’s design philosophy. In glass, Hoffmann’s work is characterized by simple, full forms and spare, usually geometric decoration. This set of glasses was probably made at Meyr’s Neffe, one of the Bohemian glassworks that fabricated the Wiener Werkstätte’s designs.
Physical DescriptionFooted Goblet or Vase. Transparent royal blue lead glass; blown into mold, rim and foot ground, polished. Tall vase with deep bell-shaped bowl, slightly flared rim joined to smaller bell-shaped hollow foot making the vessel reversible.
Provenance
Source Robert K. Brown - 1974-05-02
Object copyright© Josef Hoffmann

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