Glass Message Board
Glass Discussion & Research. NO IDENTIFICATION REQUESTS here please. => New Zealand & Australia Glass => Topic started by: JANE on March 08, 2019, 06:09:45 AM
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I've attached pics of the item - 14cm tall pink jug. And also of the signature on the base. It is Australian and I think it is dated 98. I've searched many different combinations of the name but nothing came up. Can anyone assist? Thank you.
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What you have there is a rare, but not necessarily valuable, piece of Rarotonga, Cook Islands, Glass. You can see Raro and Cook Is, as well as possibly Tim or Kim. I thought I had written this up on my newzealandglass blog, but it seems I mentioned it only in passing: http://newzealandglass.blogspot.com/2013/06/keith-mahy-one-of-pioneers.html (http://newzealandglass.blogspot.com/2013/06/keith-mahy-one-of-pioneers.html)
In 1997, Keith Mahy and others (Garry Nash, Shona Firman ...) developed the Beachcomber Glass Studio in Rarotonga, followed in 1999 by a training course there for young potential Rarotongan glass artists.
I have two pieces, one signed by Garry, and one by Apii Rangi - I will write a blog later today.
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Thank you Stuart. That’s wonderful. And apologies for the red herring, saying it was Australian. It was a gift from my parents and yes they have been to the Cook Islands. Puzzle solved. Very grateful. Jane
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Jane, may I use your photos (attributed, of course) in my Blog?
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yes of course. Actually can I email you better ones, and in higher resolution? My email is jane AT kanga1 DOT com DOT au If you email me there then I'll reply with other pics. j
[Mod: email address modified to foil robot info harvesters.
Always best to use the envelope icon to send a message - assuming personal settings permit the envelope to be seen by others.]
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Email on its way, thanks.
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I have just published a new blog about the glass training scheme Keith Mahy, Shona Firman and Garry Peter Nash established in Rarotonga in 1997-9 http://newzealandglass.blogspot.com/2019/03/glass-from-rarotonga.html (http://newzealandglass.blogspot.com/2019/03/glass-from-rarotonga.html)