From 1900 to the 1950s, most glass was made to be useful, not just decorative. Even Gallé’s decorative pieces were intended to be used, perhaps as a vase to hold flowers. Many of Tiffany’s iridescent wares were meant to set…
Collectors call the glass shown here “paperweight” vases or bottles or dishes. That’s not because they’re paperweights, but because the sophisticated glassmaking techniques used to make them were first used in the mid 19th century to make paperweights. The pictured…
An auction of modern glass pieces by top glass artists Lino Tagliapietra, Dale Chihuly, Dan Dailey, John Kuhn and William Morris was recently held by Rago in Lambertville, New Jersey. Many of the glass pieces came from one California collection.…
The islands of Venice have a long, romantic history of glassmaking. In 1291 the presiding Doge of Venice established the island of Murano as a glassmaking area. Venetian glass, itself influenced by Islamic glass designs, influenced Continental tastes. For hundreds…
Seattle-area artist Dale Chihuly is the best-known of the late twentieth-century studio glassmakers. He graduated from the University of Washington in 1965 with a degree in architecture and later studied with Harvey Littleton at the University of Wisconsin. In 1971…
Terry Kovel, our own "Grand Dame of Antiques," is turning 94. Happy Birthday from all your faithful fans and staff! Here is Terry with the mustache cup that started it all, purchased when she was only 9 years old! What…
History lovers entranced with Egyptian mummies received a treat recently when Egypt's antiquities ministry unveiled a 4,500-year-old burial ground discovered near the Giza pyramids. The discovery, in a spot known for its tombs and burial shafts from various periods, contained…