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Blog, Collecting, Czech Glass, Glass, Shopping, Travelling

A Glass Painter’s Goblet – A Rare 19th Century Discovery

Posted on February 11, 2022February 11, 2022 by Mark Hill

Antiques expert Mark Hill examines a rare 19th century German or Bohemian enamelled glass painter’s advertising or promotional goblet.

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Posted in Blog, Collecting, Czech Glass, Glass, Shopping, Travelling  |  Tagged bohemian glass, der glasmaler, enamelled glass, glasmaler, glass enameller, glass goblet, glass painter Leave a comment
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Newsletter

ABOUT MARK HILL :

Mark is an author, publisher, TV presenter, and the leading specialist dealer in postwar Czechoslovakian glass. He has been an expert on the BBC Antiques Roadshow since 2007, and co-presented four primetime TV shows on antiques, collecting and interiors for BBC2, including two series of Collectaholics. Mark lectures widely and is an Arts Society (NADFAS) accredited lecturer, a member of The British Antiques Dealers’ Association, and a Freeman of the City of London.

Member of The British Antique Dealers’ Association

NEWSLETTER

MARK'S LATEST TWEETS

    Tweets by @antiquemark

MARK'S INSTAGRAM

    markhillantiques

    Some things may never have their story revealed. B Some things may never have their story revealed. But we still like them. 

I was charmed by this watercolour study from 1971 - seemingly for a final picture - of two cherubs or putti fighting for a Chinese porcelain bowl outside a burning country house. The caption reveals where - it’s Wilton House, which suffered a fire of debatable seriousness in the south wing in 1647. It looks pretty serious to me in this picture!! Whatever, it was rebuilt by renowned architect Inigo Jones and his architect nephew John Webb. 

There’s also an inscription on the back, in biro. Quite why someone called Andrew painted this in 1971, and asked someone called William to include this study or the final picture in something (an exhibition? A catalogue or book?), I simply can’t find. Maybe I’ll never know. 

But I still like it! 

(And what is that very strange sculpture on the pedestal all about?!)
    Mundane and useless today as it may appear, there’s so much I love about this letter rack. It’s a snapshot of an age over a century ago.

The style is Secessionist, effectively a branch of Art Nouveau with more geometric symmetry. Arching and peaking around 1900, it was named after groups of artists and designers who broke with the traditional norms in terms of style to strike out on their own. They began in Munich in 1892, continued with the famous Vienna Secession in 1897, and continued with Berlin in 1898. It’s often known as Jugendstil on the Continent, which literally means ‘young-style’. 

Associated mames such as Gustav Klimt, Hosef Hoffman, Koloman Moser, and Joseph Maria Olbrich are truly names to conjure with today. 

And look at the construction - rectangular section copper and brass rods are bent and fused to great decorative effect, almost echoing Gothic church window designs. Today, or even over the past 70 years, the quality would truly have been much poorer. The materials may not be precious, but it’s a contemporary piece at the height of its style and, judging from the construction, the partly polished patina, and the screws on the base, this is original - from Past Times it is not!

Who can’t deny the joy of receiving a handwritten letter, especially in our age of impersonal emails? With writing being a core activity of any day at the time, this would have been the focal point of the desk of a well-to-do person with an eye for the avant garde, and progressive art and design. Imagine those rich colours against a dark late 19thC mahogany desk!

Substance, sculpture, story, style. 

Found and bought for £35 from the vastly excellent @hemswellantiquecentres
    Once again, the dealers and organisers of @decorat Once again, the dealers and organisers of @decorativefair have pulled out all the stops to produce a fair full of inspiration, excitement, emotion, decoration, erudition, and more. A much-needed feast for the senses and mind in troubling times. It’s on all this coming weekend. A visit brings constant joy, as I well know! Go! Visit @decorativefair for tickets 🤩
    I’m delighted to announce that I have joined the I’m delighted to announce that I have joined the BBC Antiques Roadtrip team! 

It’s fast-paced, fab fun taking the classic for a spin around Scotland with my dear friend Roo Irvine (@rooirvine). We found treasures galore - tune in later this year to find out what they are! And, of course, who wins!

In the meantime, you can read an interview with me by the kind people @hellomag here - 

https://www.hellomagazine.com/film/20220504139330/antiques-road-trip-mark-hill-new-expert-exclusive/?viewas=amp
    I just walked through a busy hotel reception in my I just walked through a busy hotel reception in my @earlofbedlam tweed Plus Fours and everyone looked. Not sure if it’s because they are Plus Fours or because I undid the calf buckles to sit down for dinner and they made me sound like a Morris Dancer as I walked along. Or both…
    I give them back. Single use plastic cups. Inste I give them back. Single use plastic cups. 

Instead I pop out my £12 Edwardian collapsible silver-plated cup. More elegant, more fun, and more sustainable - with a quick rinse, it will last a lifetime. Antiques really are green.
    Some things are just too cheap. Like this 17th cen Some things are just too cheap. Like this 17th century engraving I bought yesterday.

It was printed by hand in 1686, and was produced by Dutch engraver Michael Burghers for Robert Plot’s ‘Natural History of Staffordshire’, published that year.

It shows Prestwood House and estate, country seat of the wealthy Foley family. The house, near Kingswinford, was demolished in the 1920s. 

It’s large, beautiful, and filled with a wealth of wonderful detail. And it’s very, very old.

336 years old, to be precise, made during the reign of King James II. Nearly three and a half centuries ago.

It cost me £12. The price of a glass of good wine in a bar, or an okay bottle from a supermarket. And how long do they last?!
    “It looks like an old steam train!” she exclai “It looks like an old steam train!” she exclaimed. 

“The ones with a dead spider in the bottom are always worth looking at.” a friend once told me. 

Chance find this week - a 1980s Polish Velt studio glass chimney vase, designed by Maria Veltuzen-Nagrabecka and made at the Stanislav Michny glassworks, inscribed ‘Velt’ on the base. 

£10. Organic detritus and double dead spiders inside, free.
    Two curious small bowls bought in an antiques shop Two curious small bowls bought in an antiques shop in Naples, Italy, this past weekend. They were being used as eggcups to hold two nearly new Christmassy painted eggs. I thought they were Finnish at first, by Tapio Wirkkala or someone like that. Now I’m not so sure as I can’t find the shape. The cutting is also slightly different on each, but I love the optical effects caused by the thick bodies and rounded rims. More research to be done!
    I’ve seen plenty of souvenir brooches or pins co I’ve seen plenty of souvenir brooches or pins commemorating the Coronation of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II before. But not this one. 

Browsing around the excellent @wembleyantiquesmarket today, I chanced upon it for £10. 

What a perfect piece to find in Her Majesty’s platinum jubilee year, marking her 70th year on the throne.

Sadly, this pin isn’t made from platinum to match the year. Like most Coronation souvenir jewellery, it’s plated base metal and some rather cheap rhinestones. One or two of which are missing. So we agreed £8 would do.

But it is an original pin from 1953, with a Tudor rose, a clover, and a thistle to mark the countries of the Union. Two ‘baguette’ cut ‘stones’ sit between E and R to mark she was the second queen named Elizabeth. On top sits a crown. 

As I said, I’ve never seen this one before - have you? 

Vivat Regina!
    Yes, it’s a bit creepy. Well, maybe more than a Yes, it’s a bit creepy. Well, maybe more than a bit creepy. But it’s an original painting and the frame was nice - once upon a time.

I’ve always been strangely fascinated by those weird, kitschy pictures of big-eyed, large-headed children that were so popular in the the 1960s-70s, led by Margaret Keane’s work. Definitely a fad then, but so very collectable today. 

I guess it’s that weird attraction you sometimes feel towards something you really hate.

So I couldn’t resist this 16in high painting, especially as it was ever so slightly more palatable and interesting than the usual fare. We agreed a price of £15, too. You see framed prints literally every-where, but never original paintings. Somehow, hideous as I find them, I don’t think they should be ignored as an international fad of their day.

On the tube home, I managed to read the signature, ‘I Vernet’. Bingo! L. Vernet was a highly prolific illustrator for prints and postcards during the period.

I can’t find anything out about the presumably highly commercially successful Vernet online, so he’s very much a mystery. Also a mystery is where I shall hang it to scare guests. The downstairs loo, or the guest bedroom?! 😂
    Sunday funday mystery object! Any ideas?? See my b Sunday funday mystery object! Any ideas?? See my blog for the best guess…link in bio. And there’s a clue in the image! Or maybe there isn’t. Can you sniff it out? Handy?!
    We’re back! The Antiques Roadshow returns to BBC We’re back! The Antiques Roadshow returns to BBC1 at 7pm tonight, 13th February. I’m first up, opening the show with an amazing find rescued from fire. 

We were at Portchester Castle, and here I am with my esteemed and lovely colleagues and friends Hilary Kay and Ronnie Archer-Morgan. It was a great day - tune in to see what we found!!

📸 @decanterman
    I bet you’ve never seen one of these before! I h I bet you’ve never seen one of these before! I hadn’t either! Titled ‘Der Glaßmaler’ (The Glass Painter), a wonderfully detailed handpainted scene is accompanied by German verse. Read about it, and my thoughts about what it was made for, on my blog. Rare, rare, rare! Link in bio.
    Posted @withregram • @bbcantiquesroadshow Surpri Posted @withregram • @bbcantiquesroadshow Surprising stories, priceless treasures, and car boot bargains 🖼️ 💍 🕰 

Fiona and the #AntiquesRoadshow team return this weekend for a brand-new episode from @englishheritage #portchestercastle 🏰 

📺  Sunday 13 Feb 7pm BBC One

Here's a sneak preview of the series 👀 Enjoy 😊
    Makey-doey Sunday. I’m not really much good at d Makey-doey Sunday. I’m not really much good at doing such things with my hands. But I was quite proud of repurposing this 1970s Danish rosewood spoon shop display box into a box for my favourite pins! Now I can see them!!
    What am I looking at @decorativefair? My most favo What am I looking at @decorativefair? My most favourite pieces from the fair, two tactile patinated bronze limited edition sculptures by British artist Henry Cliffe (1919-83), for sale with @henry.saywell. I’m a real Cliffe fan and own a watercolour study of his which is definitely a keeper for me. I feel Cliffe’s wonderful work is on the up - will you make these a keeper for you?! Last day tomorrow (Sunday) to do so, and see all the other fabulous things @decorativefair that will make your soul sing.
    If you do one thing this weekend, visit the @decor If you do one thing this weekend, visit the @decorativefair in Battersea Park, London. The dealers there never fail to inspire, surprise, delight and excite. Our homes and their contents have become so much more important to us, and will continue to do so. Fill them full with fun, meaning and, well, soul. Here are some of my favourite vignettes and, last of all, my favourite piece - an etching by Marie Laurencin from @ottocento.fineart. And so superb to see the amazing late artist and sculptor Ron Hitchins receiving the posthumous credit he deserves from @edbutcher_antiques. Tickets and all the info you need on @decorativefair. Go!
    Love love love my new pin from @gillianhorsup, who Love love love my new pin from @gillianhorsup, whose shop @alfiesantiques never ceases to surprise, amaze, and delight. I never leave empty handed. This Danish sterling silver treasure was made by Viggo Fammik of Copenhagen in the 1960s. Still snazzy and modern today, sixty years after it was made.
    Happy new year, everyone! Here’s to a better one Happy new year, everyone! Here’s to a better one, and making it as good a one as we can regardless. Lets hope it’s healthy, happy, successful and fun. Cheers!
    Load More… Follow on Instagram
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