Glass Discussion & Research. NO IDENTIFICATION REQUESTS here please. > China & Taiwan
Chinese glass
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Angela B:
The Chinese have been making glass for over two thousand years. According to Clarence F. Shangraw (Chief Curator Emeritus of Asian Art Museum of San Francisco and Director Emeritus of the Tsui Museum of Art in Hong Kong) there were "several small regional centres of glass production" in China by the 2nd century BC. He goes on to say that in the 14th century AD two of these regional centres established themselves as "concentrated hubs that can now be evaluated on evidence from present-day archaeological retrieval and examination of then-contemporary historical texts" These were Canton (now Guangzhou) in the south and Boshan in the north. Glass rods from Boshan were transported to regional glass-finishing studios all over China.
In 1696 the Kangxi Emperor established an Imperial Glasshouse within the Forbidden City as part of his Department of Imperial Artwork Studios. For the first two centuries the glass (which was made for the Emperor and his family and as diplomatic gifts etc.) had a strong western influence which has been attributed to the influence of Western missionaries. However during the 18th century their designs reverted to more traditional Chinese designs and techniques and this was the "Golden Age of Glassmaking in China" (from about 1725 to 1800).
The above is from "Treasures of Chinese Glass Workshops" by Asianantiques Inc.
So when we talk about Chinese glass as if it was poor quality compared to European glass, I think we should qualify our words. There undoubtedly is a flood of poor quality glass coming out of China and available to importers in other countries. But there is also some very very good glass made in China and I think we will see more of their good quality work as trade with China becomes more prevalent.
Another relevant point here is that US importers of European paperweights back in the 1930s are said to have deliberately taken examples of Baccarat, Clichy, St Louis paperweights to China and had copies made, apparently because the supply of genuine 19th century French paperweights had dried up. At least two of these 1930s Chinese paperweights were collected by Evangeline Bergstrom and are now in the Bergstrom-Mahler Museum collection of paperweights. They are illustrated on plate 16 and plate 27 of the book "Glass Paperweights of the Bergstrom-Mahler Museum" She bought one of them in March 1935 and the other in September 1937.
Maybe that's enough from me on the subject. Are there any experts on Chinese glass out there?
Best regards
Angela
flying free:
I have just bought a set of Chinese opaque pink glass. Not centuries old. Probably about turn of the 19th/20th century, I would think at the oldest perhaps end of 19th and quite possibly even later into the 20th.
So this prompted me to have a search and I came across this post.
I just wanted to add that there is an impressive collection of Chinese glass, I believe collected in the 1930s and thereabouts, which was bought by the Bristol Museum. It is one of the largest collections of Chinese glass in the UK I think - about 300 pieces.
I've seen it in the museum a couple of times and the pieces are varied and beautiful.
There is an online search option for this collection as well.
There are some issues with some of the pieces deteriorating and a major conservation project was started I think in 2012.
It's worth searching for it and reading the information about it.
m
Anne:
M, that's interesting. I didn't know of the Bristol Museum collection but I have just googled it and found the link, which I'll add here for ease of reference: http://www.discoveringbristol.org.uk/glass/ :)
flying free:
and just so the correct information is on here rather than what I remembered:
The Bristol Museum site says:
'The Chinese glass collection at Bristol’s City Museum & Art Gallery is one of the finest outside Asia. There are over 300 pieces.
Most of the Chinese glass was acquired in 1950 from Mr H.R. Burrows Abbey through the National Art Collections Fund. It was given to Bristol partly because of the city’s history of glass-making. Mr Abbey, who was born in Brighton in 1872, began collecting Chinese glass in about 1916. He continued collecting until his death in 1949. Some of the objects he purchased had been in other private collections, for example those belonging to Mr Ellice-Clark, Captain Warre and Mr A.W. Bahr. Some pieces in his collection were shown in the International Exhibition of Chinese Art at the Royal Academy, London, in 1935-36.'
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