Glass Message Board
Glass Discussion & Research. NO IDENTIFICATION REQUESTS here please. => Germany => Topic started by: adam20 on November 16, 2012, 12:29:05 AM
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Just delivered an Erwin Eisch vase. Iridized surface with banding in purple. Quite large at 7.5" high and 6.5" diameter.
Thanks Adam
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DROOOOOLLLL
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I have noticed a German Eisch Glass that looks like factory glass, any relation to Erwin Eisch?
Adam
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Hi Adam, wow what a nice looking Eisch vase, i too managed to aquire one not so long ago, it would look even better if they were both stood together with a back light behind them. LOL
http://www.glassmessages.com/index.php/topic,34108.msg185520.html#msg185520
Happy new year
malcolm
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Please see my reply to the mentioned thread. No ´E´ before the Eisch signature means
it´s a factory piece - possibly designed by Erwin though, who was the son of the
glassworks´ founder Valentin Eisch.
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So mine is a factory piece. When you say factory, is it still a studio piece. It is of very irregular form especially the large flared rim. It was sold to me as Erwin Eisch so I am a bit annoyed. Still, it has pride of place and I like it.
See here for a piece that is not signed but has the factory label http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/RARE-PEACOCK-EYE-DECOR-BOTTLE-FLACON-SIGNED-ERWIN-EISCH-GERMANY-ART-GLASS-60s-/130821421186?pt=UK_Art_Glass&hash=item1e75907882
Adam
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Adam, please don´t be too disappointed... :'(
I checked in Helmut Ricke ´New glass in Germany´ and the info I gave is from that book.
Signatures on Eisch glass are quite different: handwritten, etched and sand-blasted.
Some pieces from the Pfauenauge (peacock-feather) range e.g. are signed, some are not.
Those factory pieces with a more individuell character like your vase seem to have a
handwritten signature usually.
None of these pieces is (exactly) like the other, so you still have an unique Eisch piece.
And they are lovely! :)
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I think Erwin is still living, I saw him within the last year or 2, and contact him and see what he can tell you about it. Personally, judging from most of the stuff Erwin made, this looks more like a piece from his dad's factory.
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Tom, thanks for the info. It has reminded me that I want to read more about Eisch Glass. I've been hunting for a piece, but so far not found 'the one' :)
m
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I have been reading a fair bit about Erwin Eisch and his factory, I feel this piece is well within the scope of being designed by Erwin. I see many peacock trailed iridescent pieces like mine by him on google. This is not fully signed by him but still bears his name and a mid 70s date. This has a slightly irregular form even for a vase.
Quote
"giving them the iridescence that one sees in Art Nouveau glass"
"Although many of Eisch's pieces of the 1960s and '70s was rooted in functional forms such as the vase, the bottle, the pitcher and the stein, the usefulness of these vessels was never Eisch's goal"
Adam