A beautiful Forest and Tree Themed Vase from the French glass master François-Théodore Legras.

A deep and soothing colour.

All items are carefully double boxed/protected for shipping

The vase is engraved 06/1917 on the bottom denoting its' year of creation.

The top is hexagonal over a bulbous body and signed in the decoration.

The vases motif is a mountain landscape behind a lake with a boat. The background is yellow in the lower part and turns into a dark yellow/orange, which is to symbolize the sunrise.

Standing 28cm (11in) tall and clearly marked with the LEG signature on the lower middle left

From the St Denis - Paris Studio.

The vase is over 100 years old.

This style can be found in the authoritative reference book for his work “Legras : Verrier Artistique et Populaire Française” by Michel and Vitrat,

François-Théodore Legras, was born in 1839 and came from humble stock, having begun life as a woodsman in the Vosges department south of Strasbourg. In 1859, Legras determined that there was potentially more to life than trees and leaves and secured himself a clerical apprenticeship at the glassworks in Clairey, a long-established manufactory producing drinking glasses and tableware which – crucially for Legras – included the manufacture of multiple frosted pieces.

After learning his trade for five years, Legras moved to Paris and took a job at the Plaine St Denis factory, securing a senior managerial role by the age of 27. He was director of the works where he was underwritten by expat-philanthropist Sir Richard Wallace.
The glass works were significantly extended and modernized, and the duo, Legras and Wallace, took over another factory at Pantin, on the northern fringes of the city.

The Legras glassworks – became a multi-centered concern employing hundreds of people across several manufacturing centers, Legras produced multiple highly-distinctive pieces which were considered their own art-glass movement.
It’s more accurate, of course, to consider the name, Legras, as one of the foremost in the panoply of innovative, experimental, and overtly artistic producers who revolutionized decorative glassware from the mid 1860's, throughout the fin de siècle – end of the century - continuing across the duration of the Great War and beyond

Unrestrained, Legras was able to encourage an experimental approach to glass production, harking back to his childhood in the Darney Forests and using opaque glass – based on Clairey’s frosted material – as a canvas on which designs could be created.

The businesses were supported by the production of utilitarian glassware for industry – distilleries and pharmacies – and this security gave François-Théodore the freedom to develop his art-glass production techniques. These include intricately cut cameo glass pieces, acid-etched and enameled imagery – requiring up to five separate firing processes to achieve the desired effect and these became the Legras hallmark. Many pieces featuring forested landscapes and the favored themes of the artistic director - irises, orchids, and chrysanthemums.

Additional members of the Legras family were apprenticed into the company, notably a nephew – Charles – whose expertise in the chemical treatment of glass to produce marbled and opaline surfaces on which designs could be overlayed. This was to prove a valuable commodity.

Charles was ultimately to take over the running of the businesses in 1909, seven years before the death of his uncle. He was able to maintain a level of innovation which sustained the company for another decade – achieving notable successes in developing synthesized “gemstones” which could be ground up and incorporated into the glass melt to give an extraordinary depth of color providing the basis for the production of striking cameo vessels.

Legras used a significant number of signatures and, to further confuse matters, many pieces aren’t signed at all.

The authoritative reference book for his glass is “Legras : Verrier Artistique et Populaire Française” by Michel and Vitrat,

A beautiful Forest and Tree Themed Vase from the French glass master François-Théodore Legras.

A deep and soothing colour.

All items are carefully double boxed/protected for shipping

The vase is engraved 06/1917 on the bottom denoting its' year of creation.

The top is hexagonal over a bulbous body and signed in the decoration.

The vases motif is a mountain landscape behind a lake with a boat. The background is yellow in the lower part and turns into a dark yellow/orange, which is to symbolize the sunrise.

Standing 28cm (11in) tall and clearly marked with the LEG signature on the lower middle left

From the St Denis - Paris Studio.

The vase is over 100 years old.

This style can be found in the authoritative reference book for his work “Legras : Verrier Artistique et Populaire Française” by Michel and Vitrat,

François-Théodore Legras, was born in 1839 and came from humble stock, having begun life as a woodsman in the Vosges department south of Strasbourg. In 1859, Legras determined that there was potentially more to life than trees and leaves and secured himself a clerical apprenticeship at the glassworks in Clairey, a long-established manufactory producing drinking glasses and tableware which – crucially for Legras – included the manufacture of multiple frosted pieces.

After learning his trade for five years, Legras moved to Paris and took a job at the Plaine St Denis factory, securing a senior managerial role by the age of 27. He was director of the works where he was underwritten by expat-philanthropist Sir Richard Wallace.
The glass works were significantly extended and modernized, and the duo, Legras and Wallace, took over another factory at Pantin, on the northern fringes of the city.

The Legras glassworks – became a multi-centered concern employing hundreds of people across several manufacturing centers, Legras produced multiple highly-distinctive pieces which were considered their own art-glass movement.
It’s more accurate, of course, to consider the name, Legras, as one of the foremost in the panoply of innovative, experimental, and overtly artistic producers who revolutionized decorative glassware from the mid 1860's, throughout the fin de siècle – end of the century - continuing across the duration of the Great War and beyond

Unrestrained, Legras was able to encourage an experimental approach to glass production, harking back to his childhood in the Darney Forests and using opaque glass – based on Clairey’s frosted material – as a canvas on which designs could be created.

The businesses were supported by the production of utilitarian glassware for industry – distilleries and pharmacies – and this security gave François-Théodore the freedom to develop his art-glass production techniques. These include intricately cut cameo glass pieces, acid-etched and enameled imagery – requiring up to five separate firing processes to achieve the desired effect and these became the Legras hallmark. Many pieces featuring forested landscapes and the favored themes of the artistic director - irises, orchids, and chrysanthemums.

Additional members of the Legras family were apprenticed into the company, notably a nephew – Charles – whose expertise in the chemical treatment of glass to produce marbled and opaline surfaces on which designs could be overlayed. This was to prove a valuable commodity.

Charles was ultimately to take over the running of the businesses in 1909, seven years before the death of his uncle. He was able to maintain a level of innovation which sustained the company for another decade – achieving notable successes in developing synthesized “gemstones” which could be ground up and incorporated into the glass melt to give an extraordinary depth of color providing the basis for the production of striking cameo vessels.

Legras used a significant number of signatures and, to further confuse matters, many pieces aren’t signed at all.

The authoritative reference book for his glass is “Legras : Verrier Artistique et Populaire Française” by Michel and Vitrat,

Æra
1400-1900
Yderligere oplysninger om titlen
Træer og bjerge
Antal artikler
1
Oprindelsesland
Frankrig
Materiale
Glas
Producent / Mærke
François-Théodore Legras
Stil
Art Nouveau
Stand
Fremragende stand - næsten ikke brugt med minimalt tegn på aldring og slid
Højde
28 cm
Bredde
10,5 cm
Dybde
9 cm
Anslået periode
1890-1919

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tutto ok, oggetti molto belli, grazie mille

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464 anmeldelser (12 de sidste 12 måneder)
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