Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests > Glass
Art Deco green vase red 'flame' splotches - Schneider
Greg.:
Thanks for adding the above info M, on my brief search I've also struggled to find out further info. The majority of references all seem to quote Stefania Żelasko.
On that note, just adding the below link for reference to an article written by Stefania Żelasko from 2010..
https://pressglas-korrespondenz.de/aktuelles/pdf/pk-2010-2w-zelasko-jelenia-gora-jugendstil-2010-eng.pdf
flying free:
Thanks for adding that link. I read that a few days ago but didn't link it as there was no mention of Erwin Pfohl when that was written in 2010.
There is family information from the Pfohls online and that confirms Erwin was at Josephinenhutte after Alexander Pfohl left. But there is very little information on him even though, if I understand correctly, he took over his family glass business and didn't die until 1975.
see here - you can cut and paste the information into google translate - it has quite a lot of info on Erwin Pfohl and states that in 1929 he was a designer for Josephinenhutte. There is no mention of him being there any longer than 1929 but that might be because the only source reference they have is a start date,then his further employment with Reich, so nothing definitive to state how long he stayed as designer at Josephinenhutte:
https://www.pfohl-glaeser.com/familientradition
Much other information does come back to the book however the confirmation find of the photograph by Dr Arthur Traube is a key I think. I also wonder if the picture in the book is a watercolour rather than a photograph of a collection of pieces? I wasn't sure. Either way, Stefania must have found it somewhere so that is another piece of confirmatory evidence. Pictures are so much better than descriptive words when it comes to describing a piece of glass at least.
flying free:
--- Quote from: flying free on Yesterday at 07:11:23 PM ---...
Equally I can't find any info about him making glass. I can find info about glass he's enamelled and references to him being a designer.
There is for example this signed enamelled piece - I've seen that same picture of the women and water on another differently shaped clear vase, shaped like an old fashioned oil lamp shade bulbous at thebottom with a straight upright neck, in a museum collection:
https://www.bohemianglass.org/katalog/vaza-4-akty-2688/detail/
...
--- End quote ---
The vase I saw is in the Waldmuseum Zwiesel - see info and pic of it here (you'll need to scroll down through the various pieces - it's clear glass enamelled with women pouring water. I think they date it to 1928:
chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://glastage.zwiesel.de/media/user_upload/Ausgewaehlte_Exponate_Waldmuseum_komprimiert_klein.pdf
flying free:
forget my question on whether the picture is a photo or a watercolour. It's a photo. Wish I could see more of the page!
m
flying free:
going back to my links in this post here:
https://www.glassmessages.com/index.php/topic,37744.msg410290.html#msg410290
When I read and translate the quote from the book (Josephinenhutte - Stefania Zelasko) it appeared to say Erwin Pfohl introduced two ranges. It then goes on to mention just one name, Vineta-Kristall. So when I first read it, it appeared to me to be describing one range called Vineta-Kristall and I wondered why the second range hadn't been mentioned.
I think it might mean that there were two ranges under the one name Vineta-Kristall because the pictures in the book and the photograph from Traube show two distinct dekors: one like mine with flame splotches on it (described by Zelasko translated as 'melted flakes'); the other range with stripes on (described by Zelasko translated as 'filigree ribbons')
Quote from my previous post
'Translating the information printed there describing the Vineta-Kristall range and using Google translate (very hard to enlarge to read script clearly though!) it appears to say:
'Consisting of numerous colored shapes, melted with flakes and filigree ribbons. This is a mass-colored crystal that, thanks to a special process, imparts seemingly random coloring.'
Also ...
There seems to be a third picture in the book but only the lower portion is visible:
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/Q-cAAOSwE-FoD5eF/s-l1600.webp
That third picture could perhaps contain items like the blue striped bowl I linked to previously:
https://www.collectorsweekly.com/stories/81417-unsung-heroes-of-glass-2-erwin-pfohl
However this dekor is not shown in the Dr Arthur Traube photograph. Only items with the dekors shown in the bottom two pictures of the book are shown.
https://collections.eastman.org/objects/26986/arrangement-of-vineta-kristall-josephinenhutte-ag-in-seles;jsessionid=BD57D9CA1EC595889D03DE3C1AFB31CE?ctx=45d0c406-f2bf-4c0c-bd6a-0d8d66506713&idx=22
Musing here - I wonder if the blue bowl has been wrongly id'd as being Vineta-Kristall because the description in original source lit might have mentioned 'melted flakes and filigree' and the dekor on the blue bowl 'could' fit that description unless the description refers to two different and separate dekors i.e. not melted flakes AND filigree stripes on the same piece? The quote definitely mentions two ranges and there are two dekors shown in the Traube photo and in the book but neither are the same as the blue bowl.
I would describe my vase as being influenced by WMF Ikora (the new amazing dekor/'thing' launched that had to be be competed with ?) and Schneider jades. Perhaps on his travels, Erwin was influenced by French Art Deco internally decorated glass?
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