Posted 7 years ago
bohemiangl…
(647 items)
This is not the type of piece normally associated with Loetz, but orders are orders, and Loetz made pitchers like this one to be used as beer serving pitchers for customers such as Timothy Taylor & Co Ltd in London. They were made in several sizes, from 1/2 pint up to 4 pints. This one is the 3 pint size - about 6.5" tall and about the same width. The ground is kristall (crystal) and it has a twisted rib optic texture, with applied handle and rim in green glass. The green bits glow brightly under black light. The pontil is finely ground and polished. It is etched with an interesting logo that repeats itself five times around the neck. The logo is a scrolled double circle, with an image of what appears to be a hops plant on the left side, and a sea griffin on the right side. I'm trying to research the origin of the logo - if anyone recognizes it or thinks they know what it represents, please let me know!
This is really an interesting pitcher, I like the optically 'Schief gewalzt' glass. Warren, do you think the hops+griffin décor is engraved, to me it looks like being etched as the sharp etches of engraving are missing.
I think you may be right, Kai - the background fields within the decor are below the surface and have a matte appearance. It is finely detailed work.
perhaps http://barclayperkins.blogspot.com.ar/2013/09/bottled-beers-in-1890s.html
I searched griffin old breweries
Hi Warren - maybe the Fullers Brewery in the UK? This has a Griffin logo - not the same as the one on this piece - but there could be a connection?
The Lnenickova shows it made for Johnsen & Jorgensen. Kind of a Scandinavian sounding...swedish perhaps, with "sen"?
Johnsen & Jorgensen of London...