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- Hundertwasser - Tapisserie
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News
Auction No.082: Art Nouveau - Art Déco
Pâte de verre
Quittenbaum Art auctions is happy to present more than 50 Pâte de verre items in its Art Nouveau-Art Déco sale on 28 April 2009.
Amalric Walter und Henri Bergé, großen Einsiedlerkrebs auf Algen, um 1910, hammer price € 22.000
The so-called Pâte de verre has a history that dates back as far as the second millennium B.C.
For this special kind of glass making, multi-coloured glass paste is being put into a mould together with a binding agent (water) and melded at relatively low temperature into a homogenous glass block. Moreover, the Pâte de verre technique, that is related to ceramics, offers the advantage that colours and shapes can be used and modelled precisely.
Mesopotamia was the first country to use this technique for the composition of jewellery and figurines. The Egyptians most prominently developed this kind of glass making between 1500 and 1000 B.C. However, when glassblowing had been discovered in the East Mediterranean area in the 1st century A.D. it became a lot easier and less expensive to produce glass. The Pâte de verre faded almost into oblivion.
François Décorchemont,kleine glockenförmige Vase mit antiken Dekorelementen, estimate € 1.300
In the 19th century only, this craftsmanship got revived in France because of the archaeological excavations that brought Egyptian Pâte de verre amulets or different sculptural grave furnishings back to light. Fascinated by this artistry, Henry Cros (1840-1907), a sculptor interested in archaeology, was one of the first to carry on research on the Pâte de verre technique. His most prominent successor was François Décorchemont (1880-1971), a splendid technician and specialist in mineralogy and chemistry. His small bell-shaped vase with antique pattern is a beautiful example (Estimate 1,300,-- €, >> fig. 2 in the german text). By the way, his special kind of glass making has not been totally analysed yet.
Amalric Walter, vase 'Blé', estimate € 6.000
One of the most famous Pâte de verre artists is Frenchman Amalric Walter (1870-1959), who also rediscovered and advanced this ancient technique. In the year 1903 Walter took over the artistical administration of Daum Frères & Cie. Glassworks in Nancy. Between 1904 and 1914 he created, together with Henri Bergé (1870-1930), a myriad of most different animals, insects and reptiles, either as small sculptures, paperweights or table decorations. 1918 Walter left Daum on friendly terms and opened his own workshop that he held until the late 1930s. From then, his signature AWalter Nancy, together with the artist’s initials, was part of the mould. To name just a few examples: the vase ‚Blé’ (Estimate 6,000,-- €. >> fig. 3 in the german text), a jewellery box with snail (Estimate 4,500,-- €, fig. 1 in the english text) or a blue kingfisher (Estimate 2,000,-- €, >> fig. 4 in the german text). Quite a few wellknown designers worked with Walter, e. g. Jacques Adnet (Vase, c. 1925, estimate 3,300,-- €, fig. 2 in the english text), or André Houillon (‚Faisan’ bowl, c. 1925, estimate 1,600,-- €, fig. 3 in the english text). By applying paint in a controlled manner, he was able time and again to achieve very intensive shades of colour.
Amalric Walter, Eisvogel, Martin-pêcheur’, estimate € 2.000
Artist Gabriel Argy-Rousseau occupied himself also with the Pâte de verre technique, increasingly after the first World War. His creations achieved international approval at the Paris Exposition des Arts Décoratifs in 1925 (Vase ‚Feuilles Modernes’, 1925, estimate 7,000,-- €, fig. 4 in the english text).
Today, the already then coveted Pâte de verre sculptures with their characteristically milky, transparent ground and velvety surface rouse collectors’ passion. In April of 2007, Quittenbaum was able to sell the very impressive ‚Bernard l’hermite’ bowl with a large hermit crab on algae for a sum of 22,000,-- € (Amalric Walter with Henri Bergé, c. 1910, >> fig. 1 in the german text).









