René Lalique
Bowl model "Lys", early twentieth century.
Opalescent glass. Mounts in silver.
Glass signed by Lalique and located in France. Numbered.
Silver with hallmarks of Barcelona.
Work published in "R. Lalique, Catalog raisonné de l'oeuvre de verre, Les editions de l'amateur", Félix Marcilhac, Paris, 1989, p. 292.
Measurements: 12.5 x 24 x 24 cm.
Open live auction
DESCRIPTION
RENÉ LALIQUE (Aÿ, France, 1860- Paris, 1945).
Bowl model "Lys", early twentieth century.
Opalescent glass. Mounts in silver.
Glass signed by Lalique and located in France. Numbered.
Silver with hallmarks of Barcelona.
Work published in "R. Lalique, Catalog raisonné de l'oeuvre de verre, Les editions de l'amateur", Félix Marcilhac, Paris, 1989, p. 292.
Measurements: 12,5 x 24 x 24 cm.
Semi-spherical centerpiece entirely made of opalescent, transparent and frosted glass, decorated with four large lily flowers. From them emerge four extended stems that act as supports at the bottom of the bowl. The mouth is outlined in silver.
Originally, the firm Lalique was founded by René Jules Lalique (1860 - 1945), one of the most prominent glassmakers of the time, and one of the first to sculpt glass for large monumental works, such as the fountains of the Champs Elysees. He enjoyed great recognition thanks to his original creations of jewelry, perfume bottles, glasses, plates, etc., within the Art Nouveau and Art Deco styles. He trained with the Parisian jeweler Louis Aucoq, and then continued his studies at Sudenham Art College in London. The excellence of his creations and the taste he applied to his works earned him important commissions for the interior decoration of ships, trains such as the Orient Express, churches such as St. Nicasius in Reims and numerous religious and civil goldsmiths. Lalique was not content with designing their models, but also founded a factory to produce large quantities, patenting several innovative manufacturing processes of glass, and various technical effects such as "satin Lalique" or opalescent glass. Lalique pieces are preserved in prominent museums such as the Corning Museum of Glass and the Metropolitan in New York, the Louvre or the Orsay in Paris, among many others.
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