Vase; DAUM NANCY, France, c. 1930.
Etched glass.
Signed.
Measurements: 37 x 27 cm.
Open live auction
DESCRIPTION
Vase; DAUM NANCY, France, c. 1930.
Etched glass.
Signed.
Measurements: 37 x 27 cm.
This engraved glass vase, made by the firm Daum Nancy in France, whose aesthetic represents the aesthetic transition from Art Nouveau to Art Deco, reflecting the evolution of taste towards more geometric, refined and abstract forms. Its intense blue coloration, uniform and translucent, gives the object a crystalline depth that highlights the reliefs produced by acid etching. The angular lines and staggered patterns that run across the surface evoke stylized mountains or architectural motifs, typical of the modern language of the time.
The Daum manufacture was founded at the end of the 19th century by Augustin Daum (1853-1909), from a small family glassworks in Nancy. He would be joined by his brother Antonin (1864-1931), and Daum's workshops would soon after become a meeting and training place for many young artists, who promoted the Art Nouveau style in Nancy. At first they made ordinary glass, but in 1891 they decided to open a decorative workshop and undertake artistic production, probably as a result of the success of Émile Gallé (1846-1904) at the 1889 Exhibition. Eventually, Daum will have a factory with more than three hundred employees and an artistic production of great variety. During World War I, the factory closed, but resumed production after the war, adapting to the change of aesthetics and leaving behind the modernism of its first period. During the Art Nouveau period, most of Daum's pieces were made of acid-etched cameo glass, but with the new Art Deco style, new techniques and decorative styles were investigated.
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