Bronze Age Gold from Wales

Bottle

Marinot, Maurice (Workshop)

Bottle and stopper, glass; standing on a flat rectangular base, straight spreading sides to a rounded shoulder, with rounded edges, and a short, narrow neck; crackled 'ice glass'; trailed with thick molten swags around the shoulder; spherical, clear glass stopper set on a circular rounded plinth, crackled.

Maurice Marinot was a pioneer in the development of glass as a studio art form. He began his career as a painter, one of the Fauves (‘Wild Beasts’) of French art, whose bold use of pure colour earned them the nickname. Marinot made unique pieces, created using hand-methods and without the use of moulds. Using the full range of glassmaking skills, he blew and worked the hot glass, acid-etched and wheel-cut it when cold. He encased coloured glass within clear glass like geological strata. He created the effect of cracked ice by plunging hot glass into cold water, or a suggestion of moving water through the careful control of air bubbles.

Collection Area

Art

Item Number

NMW A 50742

Creation/Production

Role: Production
Role: Workshop
Place: France
Period: 1929

Acquisition

Gift

Measurements

Height (cm): 16.3
Width (cm): 7.5
Length (cm): 12.7
Height (in): 6
Width (in): 2
Length (in): 5

Techniques

Mouth-blown
Blown
Forming
Applied Art
Trailed
Decoration
Applied Art

Material

Glass

Location

On Display

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