Sale!

Mid-Century Italian Light Blue Murano Glass & Crystal Vase by Gae Aulenti for Venini, 1960s for sale at Pamono

$99.00 $880.00
Review

Amazing crystal and light blue Murano glass vase. This item is attributed to Venini and was produced in Italy during 1960s. This wonderful item, like the entire Venini production, is handmade and blown, delivering a mindblowing final result. This astonishi

  • Satisfaction 100% Guaranteed
  • Free shipping on orders over $30
  • 60 day easy Return

Qty:

SKU: JDR-1126012 Categories: , , ,

Description

Amazing crystal and light blue Murano glass vase. This item is attributed to Venini and was produced in Italy during 1960s. This wonderful item, like the entire Venini production, is handmade and blown, delivering a mindblowing final result. This astonishing vase will decorate a midcentury living room or bedroom, adding timeless elegance. Dimensions (cm) height – 17 diameter – 10 Veninithe world famous Italian glass companytraces it roots to 1921, when Paolo Venini (1895-1959), a Milan lawyer with glassmaking ancestors, and Giacomo Cappellin (1887-1968), a Venetian antiques dealer, launched the Cappellin Venini & C. glass factory on the island of Murano. Under the art direction of Vittorio Zecchin, Cappellin and Veninis business produced high quality, Renaissance-style goblets, pitchers, and vases. In 1925, following a dispute with Zecchin, Cappellin and Venini split their business in two. Veninis business took the name Vetri Soffiati Muranesi Venini & C., along with a new, visionary art director, Napoleone Martinuzzi. Venini soon became synonymous with flamboyantly hued art glass and glass lighting at the cutting edge of contemporary aesthetics. From 1927-1932, Venini explored a series of new, techniqueslike pasta vitrea (opaque glass), vetro incamiciato (layered glass), and vetro pulegoso (bubble glass)which engendered particularly experimental forms for the time. Veninis reputation for innovation grew through exhibitions at national fairs, like the Venice Biennale, Monza, and eventually the Triennale di Milano. Around this time, Venini went into to partnership with Gio Ponti, Pietro Chiesa, Emilio Lancia, Michele Marelli, Tomaso Buzzi, and Carlo Visconti di Modrone to form Il Labirinto, an association for the promotion of modern design. In 1932, Martinuzzi decided to dedicate himself to sculpture, and Veninis artistic directorship went to architects Tomaso Buzzi and Carlo Scarpa. The modernist vision they brought to Venini represented an exciting, modernist turn for the company. Scarpa was particularly interested in capturing and amplifying lights interaction with glass and was instrumental in developing new techniques like battuto (beaten glass), tessuto (glass with lines), granulare (glass with small globules), and murina (patterned glass made from rods). Following World War II, Venini continued to produce glass in a modern idiom, frequently in collaboration with important midcentury designers and architectsnot only Carlo Scarpa and Gio Ponti, but also BBPR,Fulvio Bianconi, Roberto Menghi, Tobia Scarpa, Massimo Vignelli, and Tapio Wirkkala. When Paolo Venini passed away in 1959, his company passed to his son-in-law, Ludovico Diaz De Santillan. In the 1970s, Ludovicos daughter, Laura, managed the company, until the Gardini and Ferruzzi families acquired it in the mid-1980s. Through the end of the 20th century, Venini continued to work with outstanding design talents, including Gae Aulenti, Mario Bellini, Alessandro Mendini, Timo Sarpaneva, and Ettore Sottsass. In 2001, Venini was acquired by Italian Luxury Industries. In the 21st century, the company has commissioned designs from the likes of Tadao Ando, Atelier Biagetti, Atelier O, Barber Osgerby, the Bouroullec brothers, the Campana brothers, Gaetano Pesce, Matteo Thun, and Studio Job. In 2011, Venini celebrated its 90th anniversary with a travelling exhibition that visited the Glass Museum of Murano, Palazzo Grassi and Punta della Dogana in Venice, the Shanghai Museum of Glass, and the Bagatti Valsecchi Museum in Milan. The first exhibition dedicated to the glass produced by Carlo Scarpa for Venini was a critical and popular success in 2013-14 when it showed at Le Stanze del Vetro in Venice and The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Venini glass can be found in the permanent collections of the Louvre, V&A, MoMA, and more.

* Please note that items made of Rosewood are subject to a special export process that may extend the delivery time an additional 2 to 4 weeks
Creator

Gae Aulenti

Manufacturer

Venini

Design Period 1960 to 1969
Production Period 1960 to 1969
Country of Manufacture Italy
Style Vintage, Mid-Century
Detailed Condition

Very Good This vintage/antique item has no defects, but it may show slight traces of use.

Restoration and Damage Details
Light wear consistent with age and use
Product Code JDR-1126012
Materials Glass, Murano Glass
Color Blue, white
Height
17 cm

6.7 inch
Diameter 3.9 inch
Duties Notice Import duty is not included in the prices you see online. You may have to pay import duties upon receipt of your order.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Mid-Century Italian Light Blue Murano Glass & Crystal Vase by Gae Aulenti for Venini, 1960s for sale at Pamono”

Related products