Glass Message Board
Glass Identification - Post here for all ID requests => Glass => Topic started by: dirk. on September 26, 2012, 08:13:54 PM
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One for Rosie... ;)
Not exclusively of course...
Animals are not my usual subject, but this guy here caught my eye. I like the way the figure is
stylised - he looks great, no matter which direction you turn him.
Anyone have an idea who MB is?
I could imagine the piece may possibly have been made in the 90īs, but thatīs just an uneducated
guess. 8)
Heīs ca. 20cm tall and weighs almost 2kg.
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Oooo, he's lovely and so big! Unfortunately, I can't help with "MB" though.
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I'm working on it Dirk... as Anik says, he is a lovely chappie and must be important to have been signed so clearly. :)
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Could it be Michael Bang he certainly made Elephants so why not Penguins ?
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Michael Bang was my first thought too JP, but it isn't the way he signs his work, so for the moment I have put that thought on the back burner. But I haven't dismissed it.
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Thanks for your suggestions - much appreciated! :flowers:
Iīve been trying to find german glassmakers also, but I canīt think of any MBs in question.
Letīs wait... It so often happens that you find the answer, when youīre searching for
something completely different, doesnīt it?
So, if you stumble across this guy, please, remember this thread. :)
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Dirk, I never give up! And I will keep looking. :)
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Agreed Rosie definitely not Michael Bang. See attached signatures. The third signature is actually from a penguin of his - the fourth photo is a profile shot
Ross
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Thanks for the pictures, Ross. The more I look at the signature... the īMī looks
quite continental, doesnīt it? ???
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I see it as a studio piece, carefully executed, with a carefully polished pontil mark, and a pride taken in the neat and carefully written signature.
I wonder if someone like Adam Aaronson might look in and see if he recognises this signature?
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I should have mentioned in my description... The piece is hollow, so the īpontil markī is a whole
actually. But it gives an idea of the thickness of the glass... :)
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Ah, that is really useful information Dirk, Scandinavian birds are very often hollow blown and the base just a hole, so I will start looking again at some of the art glass from these areas.