Share your favorites on Show & Tell

An early Galle 'Double-Carp' Vase: 'A Collectors Dream'.

In Art Glass > French Art Glass > Show & Tell.
MarmorealMai…'s loves20 of 2061Harrach Tango documented animal figureA rare Harrach Gothic Revival Cup-Up pair
21
Love it
0
Like it

artfootartfoot loves this.
SEAN68SEAN68 loves this.
Michelleb007Michelleb007 loves this.
MarmorealMaidenMarmorealMaiden loves this.
vetraio50vetraio50 loves this.
LazyBoyLazyBoy loves this.
kivatinitzkivatinitz loves this.
blunderbuss2blunderbuss2 loves this.
inkyinky loves this.
ManikinManikin loves this.
jimtimjimtim loves this.
GlassieGlassie loves this.
IvonneIvonne loves this.
LovelyPatLovelyPat loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
kwqdkwqd loves this.
BHIFOSBHIFOS loves this.
auraaura loves this.
dav2no1dav2no1 loves this.
sklo42sklo42 loves this.
See 19 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 4 years ago

    kairomalte
    (87 items)

    I would like to put the vase shown here with some few remarks into its historically context.

    At the end of the 'Victorian Century' – in Germany called 'Historism' - glass production and décoration culminated and resulted into a nearly endless sequence of 'Revival Styles' beginning with 'Antique Roman', followed by 'New Gothic, Renaissance,' 2.nd Rococo and ending by an arbitrary mixture of them alltogether. It seems like a paradox that under the influence of Japanese (and Chinese) Art, especially ceramics, bronce vessels and woodcut prints, a new authentic style began to emerge in Europe, whereas Japan itself forgot its own history and opened its market for the US/European economics and modern industry products.

    In the glass and ceramic productions in 1875-80's the 'Japanonism' style became successful with the designs of Eugene Rousseau. He did not just copy Japanese shapes and décors, but transformed them into expressive art objects. He was the first to use the simple shape of the double-carp (usually used in Japan, a fortune giving symbol of the union of a pair of lovers, as a ceramic gift on New Year) as a cut and polished crystal vase; one example could be seen in the Duesseldorf 'Glass Museum Hentrich' as part of the collection Gerda Koepff. In his glass, he used coloured inclusions of minerals, sometimes together with craquele techniques, to produce thickwalled items – technically made available by the new methods of steam glass blowing, patented by the company Appert Freres in Clichy, France – having the appearance of semi-precious stones. These luxury objects became visible centers in the living rooms of richer people, especially as the original exotic objects were not available on the market.

    Under this influence Emile Galle made his own design of a similar double-carp vase in 1879. He mainly used marquetery techniques combined with acid etching to produce economically available products for a larger population. More exquisite products were refined by cutting and application of wonderful enamels in a large number of different styles like 'Persian, Japanese and mythological scenes' as well as of botanical objects like flowers or bilogicals like fishes, butterflies and many others. Only a very limited number (possibly only three #1-3) of his double-carp vases are known. The example exhibited in the Kitazawa Museum at Suwa, Japan – shown in foto 4 - carries the famous enamel of a carp, strongly influenced (actually almost a copy) by the Hokusai woodcut shown in vol. 13 of his 'Manga' (sketches). On one hand, this congenial combination of painting with shape is engenious, on the other side, it seems almost overloaded and the vase is clearly dominated by the enamel, only. In the vase shown in fotos 1-3, the brilliant, jewel like appearence of the crystal glass is eye-catching due to it's predominantly red mineral-like inclusions – obviously leaned from E. Rousseau's glass treatments – it is mainly supported by the glass cutting and polishing, enhancing the eyes, fins and scales, thus shaping the contours of the double-carp vase, which is finely contrasted by the 2.nd Rococo style mount.

    For completeness sake, I mention the popular series of double-carp vases designed probably by E. Galle and made by Baccarat; in 1878 three different models were produced. From an artistic point of view they, by far, cannot compete with the above mentioned work.

    Luxury pieces made by E. Galle, get today prices in between 250.000-500.000 $, The tremendous increase in price could be seen for example in the double-carp vase of the Kitazawa museum, the same piece with a mount similar to this vase, was sold by Sotheby's in 2013 for 55.000 € and then, one year later in France for more than 150.000 €. Today it would be placed within the top ranking pieces. This vase here has a large crack that extends nearly 2/3 around its base and it was offered by Turner Auctions in April 2021 starting at a low price of 50 $ without knowledge of, nor mentionig its Galle origin. Though damaged, I thougt that I would bide setting my maximum to about 1000 $, but on biding I actually finished as a underbider at 3200 $ (including fees, shipping to Germany, tax and customs this corresponds to 5000 $) and let the vase go to its happy winner. This was the very rare moment, I had the chance to obtain a unique Galle object for a reasonable price, but finally my financial possibilities were too limited.

    This vase stands impressive 40 cm high (the glass vase itself is 38 cm) and the diameter is 15x10 cm.
    The fotos 1-3 were those of Turner Auctions used for their internet auction in April 2021. The last foto shows a poster of the Galle vase at the Kitazawa Museum at Suma, Japan.

    # 1. Coll. A.Lesieutr, Paris, see Janin Bloch-Dermant 'The Art of French Glass' page 88 fig.123
    # 2. Museum Kitazawa, Suma, Japan, see foto 4
    # 3. The vase offered on Turner Auction April 2021

    logo
    French Art Glass
    See all
    Glamorous Art Deco Vaseline Uranium Glass Vase 1930' H.Hoffmann by Lalique
    Glamorous Art Deco Vaseline Uranium...
    $15
    SIGNED/MARKED LALIQUE FRANCE VINTAGE CRYSTAL NOGENT FROSTED BIRD PEDESTAL BOWL!!
    SIGNED/MARKED LALIQUE FRANCE VINTAG...
    $289
    Art Deco Sculpture Vaseline Uranium Glass Bowl 1930' H.Hoffmann by Lalique
    Art Deco Sculpture Vaseline Uranium...
    $31
    1 Vintage French Portieux Vallerysthal Blue Opaline Glass Water Wine Goblet 4 AV
    1 Vintage French Portieux Valleryst...
    $85
    logo
    Glamorous Art Deco Vaseline Uranium Glass Vase 1930' H.Hoffmann by Lalique
    Glamorous Art Deco Vaseline Uranium...
    $15
    See all

    Comments

    1. vetraio50 vetraio50, 4 years ago
      Great read and bad luck. You’d have been really lucky to have caught this one.
    2. inky inky, 4 years ago
      Terrific read, thank you!..and sorry you missed out..but next time!!..:-)
    3. kivatinitz kivatinitz, 4 years ago
      compliments for this post and for the vase fabulous
    4. LoveAmorphousSolidSilica, 3 years ago
      Thank you for this great article. It's especially meaningful to me because I was one of the bidders as well...and this beautiful Galle vase was the proverbial 'one that got away'. I'm honored to have been in such great bidding company.

      I too was surprised that the auction house did not 'catch' this incredible fish-vase identity. At first I thought it might have been by E. Rousseau, due to the similarity of the internal coloring in both Artists work, but this double headed fish/carp design was Galle, hands down.
      (I'm a big fan of Eugene Rousseau and Ernest Leveille...or as I think of them,
      'E. & E.')

      I dropped out of the bidding at $2000.00, knowing that if I went higher, the additional fees would be killer. It was hard to 'let it go', but I believed the vase was going to go for $10,000.00 minimum, plus fees, even with the crack. I was surprised it did not.

      There's a very happy collector somewhere, telling a great Fish Story to his friends!

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.