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recommended Books to get started

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newtothis:
Hello again!

  Can anyone recommend a few good books to get me started with Murano. I'm thinking glass from the 50's and 60's. Maybe a book that deals with that time period.

Thanks,
Cathy

Bernard C:
Hi Cathy,

How about Benson, Nigel, Glass of the '50s & '60s, Miller's, 2002.   Cheap and cheerful, accurate, and will also help you distinguish between Murano and Scandinavian glass.   I found a Paolo Venini egg timer in this for someone else on this board.

Likewise, but hardback, much bigger and more expensive is Jackson, Lesley, 20th Century Factory Glass, Mitchell Beazley, 2000

I own two of each of these, one I refer to regularly, and another for when the first wears out.

The most obvious specialist book on Murano glass is Barovier Mentasti, Rosa, Venetian Glass 1890-1990, Arsenale, 1992.   You will need to cover a wider period than just the '50s and '60s, as many classic designs from the '20s, '30s and perhaps even earlier are still being made today.

See also my topic Italian Art Glass Signatures for an expensively produced exhibition catalogue that seems to have been remaindered at £18.00.   Excellent value.   You should be able to find this at glass fairs if you can't find one elsewhere.

Like yourself, I would welcome more suggestions.   There is a huge display of books on Murano Glass in the museum shop on the island, but most are, unsurprisingly, written in Italian.   I speak about three words, but with O-level Latin and a reasonable command of English, I find I can just about figure it out in specialist glass books.

Bernard C.  8)

Anonymous:
Hi Bernard,

 That was me with the egg timer! Got me to thinking about getting some books on Murano glass. Presently I only have books on American glass. I looked into buying the one you stated with the egg timer in it. I'm ordering it. I appreciate all your help.

Cathy

Bernard C:
Cathy,

I took the plunge a couple of days ago and bought my first '60s or thereabouts Murano glass.   Three colourful chunky pull-your-arms-out-of-their-sockets lumps.   A pair of triangular sommerso bowls, and a cased ruby vase.   They have to be Murano - they couldn't be anything else.

I intend to photograph them and put them up on this board and perhaps also on "75" to see if anyone can attribute or date them properly. Hopefully that will provide some pointers as to what sources (books, websites, &c) the experts use.

Well, it's worth a try.

Bernard C.  8)

ps.  Books are quite variable in their value to ordinary collecters and dealers like you and me.   In general I find the most useful are those written by dealers like Nigel, closely followed by those by established specialist collectors.   Then exhibition catalogues, and specialist auction catalogues such as those written by Simon Cottle and his team at Sotheby's.   Most auction catalogues are useless for reference purposes.   Books by museum staff are quite variable, as, unfortunately, the more obscure and difficult the subject, the better it looks to their peers on their CVs.   So the entrenched museum system does not encourage them to write books on what we would find useful, although there are several authors from the museum world such as Lesley Jackson who have produced great reference works.

If you are not sure about any book you are thinking of buying, then I suggest you either borrow it from a library first or query it here.

Anonymous:
Hi Bernard,
  I did order the books... Nigel Bensons Glass of the 50's and 60's and the 20th Century Glass Factory last night. I'm looking forward to getting those and reading them. I have to say I'm very nervous about buying Murano. I have seen quite a bit of glass coming from China and right now I wouldn't be able to tell the difference! Of course, I'm talking about new glass. I only have seen some vintage jaw dropping Murano pieces in an antique store I frequent and I have to say...the glass from China sure doesn't look like it. The pieces I keep looking at every time I go are unbelievable! However, I have my eye on a new piece right now, it's a red and crystal heart shaped sculpture by Murano and I really like it. I'm hoping they will discount it but I'm not holding my breath. They had two cat sculptures there, one standing at least 20" tall and another at about 8". Those sold within days!!! I really wanted to collect vintage but some of the pieces I've seen are really nice.

Is there a way to find out which vintage designs Murano re-made?

Cathy

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