All About Murano Glass, Including What It Is and How to Collect It
Also known as Venetian glass, these pieces are especially valuable if there are specks of real gold or silver swirled into them.
In the 1955 film Summertime, Katherine Hepburn's character finds romance with Venetian antique dealer Rossano Brazzi, and it was then that American viewers fell in love with Murano glass. Today, moderately priced Murano glass goblets, tumblers, decanters, candlesticks, plates, bowls, and small art objects line the shelves of flea markets, estate sales, thrift stores, and small antique shops all over America.
"Everybody's grandmother went to Venice and bought some," says New York designer and collector Marjorie Reed Gordon. "Then, they put it all away to be used on some special occasion and so nothing ever got broken. That's why there is so much around."
Shapely, sparkling, and reflecting the magic of light on lapping water, Murano glass is too much fun to keep behind cupboard doors. "I find it everywhere—sometimes, for under $100," says Gordon, "and I don't store it away. I use it every night." These pieces are a carnival of delicate, sea-washed colors, twisted spirals, and contrasting stripes. Graceful sea creatures and shells dominate traditional Murano glass imagery—a nod to Venice's watery history.
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What Is Murano Glass?
Murano glass is the beautiful, delicate glassware made in Venice, typically on the island of Murano, from about the 13th century to present day. Murano glass can take the form of drinking glasses and goblets to vases and decorative glass pieces.
The Difference Between Venetian Glass and Murano Glass
In short, there is no difference between the two. Venetian glass is simply another name for Murano glass. Most people know of the city of Venice more than they do the small island of Murano, so Murano glass can popularly be called Venetian glass as a result. Murano glass has been and continues to be manufactured on the island of Murano in the city of Venice, hence the name.
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The History of Murano Glass
Glassmaking has been a part of Venice's history since the tenth century. The industry had declined by the early 1800s but revived in the 1860s when Venice officially became part of Italy, and every region was called on to manufacture products for the collective good.
Its Distinctive Look
Ancient formulas and techniques were reintroduced and by 1878, Venetian glassmakers were the toast of Paris' Exposition Universelle. The world loved the delicate, translucent creations made with the traditional Muranese sodium-based formula rather than the quick-cooling, lead-based formula used in making crystal. Lead glass hardens in eight minutes, so designers have to resort to cutting, etching, or painting to decorate the glass after it cools. Venetian glassblowers, unlike their colleagues in northern Europe, had 22 minutes before the glass hardened, which gave them plenty of time to complete more complex designs.
20th Century Renaissance
Another era of glassmaking began in 1921 when Paolo Venini, a Milan-trained lawyer who had fallen under the spell of Venetian glass, started a glassworks on the island of Murano, home of the industry since the thirteenth century. Venini's genius was in his use of first-rate designers who adapted ancient styles. His company began to revive classic sixteenth-century Italian shapes and to create its own elegant silhouettes. The 1920s were also the era of the great American tourist consumer, fresh from reading John Ruskin's The Stones of Venice and eager to stock up on mementos of the voyage. Even those who stayed stateside could buy themselves a memory: the United States imported masses of Venetian glass, much of it made to order for department stores.
A Modern Twist
Glass production continued even during World War II, although output was greatly reduced. After the war, the industry headed in a new direction. The aesthetic of Venini and his colleagues had become increasingly modern, and by the late 1940s, designs by artists such as Ercole Barovier, DinoMartens, Carlos Scarpa, and Fulvio Bianconi had taken center stage. Influenced by abstract expressionism and other modern art movements, these designers constructed glass sculptures in strong, contemporary shapes and bright colors. In recent years, they have become sought-after works of decorative art making headlines at international sales. While more traditional glassware was still made in the decades after the war, the most talented and experienced maestri (glassblowers) turned their attention to the new designs.
How to Recognize Murano Glass
A generation later, collectors are taking another look. "Lightness is key to recognizing Venetian glass tableware," says Usha Subramaniam of Christie's auction house in New York. "It weighs half of what you'd expect. Colors tend to be pale and admit a lot of light, with the exception of a more intense blue and red." Designs and colors were used again and again, so that a goblet from the 1920s may look much like one made in 1950.
It doesn't matter if you can't date a piece; the trick is to learn to recognize quality. "Forget dates, forget signatures. Develop your eye," says Sheldon Barr of Gardner & Barr, a New York shop where a pair of Murano glass goblets would once sell for between $200 and $500. As to the question of whether a piece is Murano glass at all: "Venetian glass isn't crystal, so it doesn't 'ping' when you tap it," says Barr. "Complicated shapes and patterns like zanfirico [in which a glass rod is twisted to form a spiral] do add value, but the best advice is always to buy what you like."
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The Value of Murano Glass
Heavier, sculptural pieces like glass fruit come in every color known to man and display bubbly textures and striations of contrasting hues. Here, value is harder to measure and is based squarely on eye appeal. Condition always counts. "It's hard to find delicate shapes like swans and dolphins in perfect condition," says Howard J. Lockwood, a New Jersey dealer. "If a piece isn't perfect its value decreases."
Collectors interested in investment should look for simple, modern shapes signed by important makers. Post-war pieces by Venini, for example, were acid-stamped on the bottom (with age, unfortunately, such signatures tend to look like smudges). One trick collectors like is using a signed piece to identify similar but unsigned pieces. Venini tumblers in red, blue, yellow, and purple stripes can be found for "practically nothing," says Lockwood, who fondly recalls the day he picked up a 1954 Martens bowl in a thrift shop for $15. Meanwhile, pieces with specks of real gold or silver swirled into them are also especially valuable.
Tips for Displaying and Using Murano Glass
Whether you buy for investment or just to set a gorgeous table, Venetian glass can be found "all over the country, especially in areas like Chicago, New York, or Florida with older, wealthy populations who took the 'grand tour,'" says Usha Subramaniam. While grateful that their predecessors seldom unwrapped their Venetian treasures, today's collectors do not follow suit. Here are some ideas for using your Murano glass.
Let Dinner Party Guests Choose Their Own Goblet
If you have a collection of Murano glass goblets, break them out for your next dinner party and put them to use. "At dinner parties, we let everyone choose their own goblet," says New Jersey dealer Caroline Schmitt. "They get people talking—about art, Italy, about beauty."
Display Murano Glass Candlesticks In Your Tablescape
Mix and match Murano glass candlesticks and then display them all in their finery down the length of your dining room table. "One of my clients buys only single candlesticks in every color," adds Barr. "She marches them down the center of the table. It's absolutely gorgeous."
Serve Champagne In Murano Glassware
"Venetian glass was born to serve champagne. It has an extraordinary luminosity in candlelight, in sunlight," Gordon says. "I mix and match it, and I've never set a table where people haven't said, 'fabulous.' It's so opulent you need less of everything else—like flowers." And if, after a little Champagne, someone crashes a goblet into a candlestick? "The joy of having Venetian glass on my table," she says, "far outweighs my fear of getting a chip."
Read the original article on Martha Stewart.