Wednesday, April 4, 2007

L. H. Selman Ltd. Paperweight Auction Spring 2007



Important Saint Louis 1973 super magnum
concentric millefiori piedouche paperweight goes to auction.


The eagerly awaited L. H. Selman Ltd. Spring 2007 Paperweight Auction will feature an important Saint Louis 1973 super magnum concentric millefiori piedouche paperweight. The auction also offers a very rare antique Baccarat dated close packed millefiori magnum paperweight. Additional historical glass art from the 19th and 20th centuries will also be featured in the 348 lots. The “absentee” auction offers the possibility of bidding over the internet, as well as by mail, fax, and telephone. The deadline for placing initial bids is April 27, 2007.

In addition to 116 antique lots from the 19th century, the Spring Auction will include three pieces of pre-war Monart Glass. There will also be 229 contemporary paperweights and related objects, featuring the work of glass masters from Europe and the United States. Among the antiques, are a very rare Bacchus close packed millefiori paperweight and two extremely rare antique Bohemian matching millefiori pedestal paperweights.

To find out more about the auction please call or go to our website TheGlassGallery.com
Posted by Suzanne Schaefer

Monday, March 26, 2007

Antique Baccarat scattered on lace-new arrival


We have just acquired an outstanding example of an antique Baccarat dated scattered millefiori and Gridel silhouette canes paperweight. This Baccarat design has always been one of my favorite and I’m always delighted when a piece as fine as this one comes along. I must admit I feel it is truly a “must have” in a well rounded paperweight collection. It is the best of Baccarat in so many ways, containing all aspects of great paperweights: historic (date cane), colorful, textural, substantial and whimsical. It contains a veritable menagerie of Baccarat’s famous and distinctive Gridel canes on an exceptional upset muslin ground. Speaking of menagerie, the following is an excerpt from The Glass Menagerie: A Study of Silhouette Canes in Antique Paperweights by John Hawley recounting the famous story of how the Baccarat silhouette canes came into being.

The best account of this can be found in the November 1955 Bulletin of the Paperweight Collectors Association which featured an article by J. de Poncins, then General Manager of the Cristalleries de Baccarat. To quote:

“It all happened in 1846. In a corner of the family living room, an eight-year-old boy was making animal cutouts of black paper.” This boy was Emile Gridel, the nephew of Jean-Baptiste Toussaint, the general manager of Baccarat. Upon entering the room and observing the work of his nephew, he apparently saw the potential of these simple black profiles as unique design elements suitable for inclusion in millefiori paperweights and immediately confiscated the cut-outs.”

The piece contains a colorful array of assorted complex canes, including a pink flower picture cane, and the Gridel silhouette canes of a butterfly, a deer, a pelican, a pigeon, a horse, a rooster, a goat, a dog, and a squirrel, on white upset muslin, with several bits of colored filigree. “B 1848” signature/date cane. Diameter 3 1/8”.

P.S. I highly recommend John Hawley’s book The Glass Menagerie: A Study of Silhouette Canes in Antique Paperweights for a very delightful and informative read.

Posted by Suzanne Schaefer
Please call me for more details or comments.

800-538-0766


Thursday, March 22, 2007

New acquisitions


We have just purchased a large collection of Antique and modern paperweights. Details later. . .