New Acquisition: Les Hommes Noirs, a masterpiece by Emile Gallé and Victor Prouvé

by Tina Oldknow, Curator of Modern Glass

The Museum has recently acquired an extraordinary work: a large vase, titled Les Hommes Noirs (The Dark Men), designed by Emile Gallé (French, 1846‒1904) and his childhood friend, the painter and sculptor Victor Prouvé (French, 1858‒1943).

Les Hommes noirs detail

Detail of Les Hommes noirs, now on view at the Museum.

Emile Gallé was born and raised in the town of Nancy, in eastern France. After apprenticing at the glass and ceramics factory owned by his father, Charles Gallé, the young Gallé eventually took over the business, expanding it into a flourishing art industry by the end of the 19th century.

Les Hommes Noirs was made by Gallé as a call for justice, for civil rights, and for the defense of the unjustly accused. Its subject refers to the intense political, judicial, and social scandal that surrounded a French Jewish military officer named Alfred Dreyfus (1859‒1935). The Dreyfus Affair (1894‒1906) involved a false accusation of treason and a subsequent cover-up that divided French society for over a decade. Gallé, who was deeply disturbed by the case, commissioned Prouvé to design a special vase for Gallé’s display at the 1900 world’s fair in Paris. Gallé intended for the vase to expose all “fanaticism, hatred, lies, prejudice, cowardice, selfishness, and hypocrisy.”

Les Hommes noirs detail

"Hommes noirs d’où sortez-vous?"

The triple-overlay, acid-etched vase is signed by both artists and dated 1900. It is inscribed “Hommes noirs d’où sortez-vous?  Nous sortons de dessous terre.” (Dark men, from where do you come? We come from beneath the earth.) Prouvé’s design shows monstrous creatures rising from the darkness of the depths of the earth or from Hell, noxious dark men who illustrate the evils of anti-Semitism and calumny. One is a crone-faced, bat-winged creature with a tail made of snakes. Another has huge deformed claws for hands. A wavy-haired male figure, representing “Truth,” looks out with a hurt expression.

The play of darkness and light in glass was a frequent metaphor used by Gallé to symbolize the battle between good and evil. The three large lilies, painted with silver stain, represent Dreyfus’s innocence.

Les Hommes Noirs is an extremely rare work in early 20th-century glass, and in decorative arts in general, in that it goes beyond the concept of the vase as a decorative vessel. As is characteristic of Gallé’s greatest works, the glass vase has become a work of art, an object that stimulates thought and discussion, and inspires noble ideas.

The most successful works of art are those that resonate across time and place. Les Hommes Noirs is one of the rare art works in glass to accomplish just that. At over a century old, its theme—protesting false accusation, ethnic profiling, and political cover-ups—is still relevant and powerful.

The vase was unveiled on October 20, during the Annual Seminar on Glass. It will be on display in the Modern Gallery.

Les Hommes noirs

Les Hommes noirs (The Dark Men). Emile Galle (French, 1846‒1904) and Victor Prouve (French, 1858‒1943). France, 1900. Blown and cased glass, cut, acid-etched, engraved, polished, applied silver stain. H: 38.1 cm, Diam (max): 32.1 cm. Collection of The Corning Museum of Glass (2011.3.1)

Watch the video on Les Hommes Noirs and the Dreyfus Affair:

Purchased in part with funds from the Houghton Endowment Fund, James B. Flaws and Marcia D. Weber, Daniel Greenberg, Susan Steinhauser, and The Greenberg Foundation in honor of Natalie G. and Ben W. Heineman Sr., James R. and Maisie Houghton, Ben W. Heineman Sr. Family, E. Marie McKee and Robert Cole Jr., Elizabeth S. and Carl H. Pforzheimer III, and Wendell P. Weeks and Kim Frock Weeks

Corning Museum of Glass at National Design Awards Gala


Last Thursday night, Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum held their prestigious National Design Awards Gala. The awards, made by Corning Museum glassmaker Eric Meek, in collaboration with Cooper-Hewitt, were given to more than 10 designers for their achievements in industrial design, communication design, landscape design and more.

Matthew Carter and Eric Meek

Eric Meek with Lifetime Achievement Award winner Matthew Carter, who has designed some of the most recognizable typefaces used today.

Hot Glass Show auction packs the house in Greece

Today we have another post from Ryan Doolittle, one of our glassblowers currently onboard the Celebrity Solstice.

Kali mera (good morning) from the Celebrity Solstice in Pireaus, Greece!

This morning I woke up early to light up the hot shop for our morning show and something rather unexpected was waiting up on the 15th open deck. It was a sea day so we were in the middle of the Mediterranean Ocean with no land in sight, so I was quite surprised to see 9 little birds flitting about on our real grass lawn that borders the hotshop. I have no idea where they came from but the reason why became clear when I asked one of our always smiling lawn caretakers, Arnold. He told me with a bit of a put upon expression that they had just reseeded the whole lawn so all the birdies were having the best lunch ever. I joked with him that the birds probably have a lookout that tells all his bird friends when a Solstice class ship with a real grass lawn chock full of delicious seeds is on the horizon.

Hot Glass Show at Sea

The Hot Glass Show team

One of our team members, Tom Ryder, just recently left for home in Corning since his contract ended. We were sad to see him go since we had a blast with him blowing glass and visiting amazing ports of call but he left with a bang since we had our best auction ever before he departed. Let me rewind a little and explain. We often get asked if we sell the glasswork that we make and the answer is always no since we’re a not-for-profit museum, but there is one instance in which some of our best pieces that we make each cruise can be purchased.  Most of the glass we make gets raffled off for free to our audience but we do have one auction per cruise in which the proceeds help fund the Celebrity Cruises Glassmaking Scholarship fund. All of our auctions have been wonderful since all our glass fans show up and literally pack the house.

Auction to benefit the Celebrity Cruises Glassmaking Scholarship fund

Auction to benefit the Celebrity Cruises Glassmaking Scholarship fund

We were especially fortunate to have our fabulous Hotel Director, Nina, act as our Vanna White and show the glass up for auction to the audience.

Hot Glass Show at Sea auction

Nina at the auction

Maybe it was her aide, the general joviality and generosity of our fans, the beauty of our glass, or just that some folks were absolutely determined to go home with the best souvenir ever but we raised almost $6,000! I think it may have been a combination of all of the above and we were all very proud that our work helped contribute so much to this amazing scholarship fund, which affords countless glass artists the chance to take classes at The Studio. Yay! Our newest team member, Dane Jack, has expressed his determination to beat our latest auction record, so ready, set, let’s blow some amazing glass on a cruise ship!

Andio for now!

Ryan

Q&A with Eric Meek on the 2011 National Design Awards

This week I sat down with Eric Meek, a glass artist and the Hot Glass Show Supervisor here at The Corning Museum of Glass, who recently worked with Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum to design this year’s National Design Award.

National Design Award 2011

The 2011 National Design Award trophy

This isn’t the first time that you’ve worked with Cooper-Hewitt. What other projects have you partnered on?

The Corning Museum of Glass brought GlassLab to Cooper-Hewitt in 2008, and it was actually the first deployment of the GlassLab container.

What was it like working with designers?

It was great at Cooper-Hewitt because they have their finger on the pulse of design.  They had fantastic people for us to work with there, some well-known designers like Francisco Costa, who is the lead designer for Calvin Klein’s women’s fashion.  We worked with a woman named Sigi Moeslinger, an Austrian designer who is one of my favorites that I’ve ever worked with just because she had such interesting designs and a fresh approach towards glass.

What do you know about the National Design Awards?

Cooper-Hewitt awards them to industrial designers, graphic designers, and architects and such every year.  As the National Design Museum, a Smithsonian museum, they have a lot of gravity because they are the nation’s voice on contemporary design.

Tell me about the award, the actual object itself. What was your design process?

Cooper-Hewitt specified that they wanted the award to represent an asterisk.  So, we started to think of ways that we could produce something based on that.  The first thing that you have to do in glass to make it take an unusual shape is to make a mold.  Peter Drobny, a local glassmaker who worked with Steuben for years, fabricated the mold for us.  Peter put together basically a hand-made prototype just in his basement.  It was a graphite cylinder and it had the ribs in it so when you pull the form out it was an asterisk.  We never wound up making a real mold because the prototype held up very well.  The idea originally was to make the plug of glass in the mold, bring it out of the mold and elongate it, stretch it, and make it taller.  In the beginning I had this idea about the surface of the glass. I didn’t want it to be glossy; I wanted it to be matte.  So I was sandblasting them, and doing a lot of work on them.  Cooper-Hewitt loved the variations we showed them, but the one that they reacted to the most strongly was actually simply the plug taken out of the mold – not stretched, not twisted. They liked the basic shape.

We involved the people at Cooper-Hewitt and so we can’t really say that there is a singular designer of the award.  It’s been a collaboration with input from a lot of different people.  We gave them different variations of the award, and (Cooper-Hewitt’s) Museum Director Bill Moggridge decided the direction.  He liked the glass when it looked raw, when you could tell it was glass and wasn’t too pristine.  We wanted to make the award out of very high quality glass that was optically pure and clear with zero bubbles and a perfect finish and everything like you always want to do as a glassmaker.  You want to make something the best you can, and they wanted it to look sort of hand-hewn and raw.  They liked something in the glass called cord, which are striations in glass caused by different compositions within the glass that can occur when it sits in the pot for too long or when it’s exposed to air.

So, we wound up with glass that was, from a glassmakers point of view, less than perfect.  But looking at the finished awards now, it really is nice that they are not perfect, and the fact that they aren’t trying to be perfect is a great thing.  We made them with as much craftsmanship as we can, but there are inconsistencies in the material that are inherent to the process, that are expressed in the award.

So how did you decide on the cut of the award?

We thought, of course, of just doing it flat on the top and the bottom, but I started cutting some at more of an angle, and then more and more of an angle.  It was nice because when it got to a certain degree, the angle winds up being about fifty degrees, it really allows you to peer into the glass and you see the reflection of the glass.  There is a lot of optical interest and distortion that goes on within the award that isn’t noticeable if you don’t cut the top.  And the other nice thing about the way that the bias cut on the top works is that when you flip it over you have the asterisk in cross-section, you can set it on that top side.

And it stands up?

It will stand like that, so the designers who receive it can kind of play with it and decide how they want to display it.

Fun! What was it like working on this project?

For the 12 awards, I made 30 blanks.  Just in case some of them cracked, or I dropped one.  I cut about 18 of them, and I polished 14 to get the 12 awards.  Probably in each award there’s, I would guess, 6-8 hours of work because they’re all hand-polished.  I spent a lot of weekends listening to music and grinding glass.  One of the fun things for me was that even when I was more active in making glass, I haven’t had such an intensive project that involved so much cold-working in a long time.  It took me back to understanding how much work goes into it, because I had forgotten.  When you look at a piece of glass like this, and some of the glass in the Museum, it’s really easy to be completely unaware of the intense, incredible amount of work that goes into making it.  I lost sight of that, and I’ve been a glassmaker for 20 years!  Sometimes as a glassmaker, you’re frustrated with others because you don’t think that they appreciate it. But then how can they when you don’t even appreciate it?  It was a great project, and I’m glad that I was able to do it.

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For more information on the National Design Awards, visit http://cooperhewitt.org/nda.

More From Rome

Today we have another post from Ryan Doolittle, one of our glassblowers currently onboard the Celebrity Solstice.

I love to ask our audience the questions, “Who has never seen glassblowing before and did you have any idea that there would be a hot glass show onboard?” Of course, a favorite answer is “Yes, we saw you on the Eclipse or the Equinox and it was the highlight of our cruise so we had to come back to a cruise ship with the CMOG Hot Glass Show on it!” I also love it when people say that they have never seen hot glass in action because the glass bug swiftly hooks them and as we all know, once the glass bug gets you, it never lets go. Our extreme glass groupie fans will forego their fancy dinners so that they don’t miss a show and these are the folks that make my day.

Corning Museum of Glass onboard the Celebrity Solstice

The Celebrity Solstice

The cherry on top of this incredible itinerary of ports in Italy, Greece, Turkey, Spain, and France is when we overnight in Venice and get to spend an afternoon in Murano. Yay glassblower paradise!! The first time I went to Murano I was literally shaking with excitement as we pulled up to the island in the water taxi. Luckily I was with my fellow glassblowers and they were able to show me some hidden highlights. I would never have been able to find Carlo Dona’s toolmaking workshop on my own and to meet the man himself and purchase a pair of jacks from him was absolute dynamite! I shot straight from cloud nine to cloud fifty.

Ryan Doolittle

At Carlo Dona’s toolmaking workshop

Bob, my generous purple kitty coin purse giver-glass-mate, has started a traveler’s guide called “A Gaffer’s Guide to the Med.” We have begun telling our audiences tips about what we like and dislike in our varying ports of call. My favorite instance was when Tom and Bob told our darling fans that they were planning on getting an infamous Kusadasi haircut in Turkey. This is far beyond a normal barbershop haircut and shave since it entails burning the hair out of your ears, a lot of waxing and a bit of a massage as well. Of course sometimes there is a bit of a language barrier and if you ask for just 2 millimeters to be taken off, you might end up with just 2 mm of hair left period. Yikes! We were all rather surprised when one of our frequent audience members came back from Turkey having gotten the infamous Kusadasi haircut. Let the good times roll!

Arrivederci for now!

Hello From Rome!

Today’s post comes from Ryan Doolittle, one of our glassblowers currently onboard Celebrity Solstice based in Barcelona.

Buongiorno from the CMOG Hot Glass Show on the luxurious Celebrity Solstice, the first cruise ship ever to have an electric hot shop! Currently we are docked in Civitavecchia, the port for Rome, and tomorrow we will be on our way to yet another fabulous city in the Mediterranean. This is my first time in Europe and I have been floating on cloud nine for the past month or so. I don’t expect the euphoria will lessen one bit the rest of my 3 month contract since every day brings another adventure in places that until now I’ve only read about in my history books.

columns

A vase inspired by Roman columns

To top it off I get to blow glass with an amazing team of glassblowers (Tom Ryder and Bob Swidergal) every day for several hours! Our goal is to first and foremost entertain our audience with whatever inspiration has recently struck us while educating them on the glassblowing process so that they never look at glass the same way again. For example, this past cruise I went to Athens to see the Acropolis and countless other ruins. When I left I had columns on my brain and after I took a ship nap (which are standard occurrences out here) and dreamt about how I would incorporate Doric columns in a glass vessel, I made it happen in that night’s show. This was the absolute perfect way to end an epic day.

I also found the perfect purple kitty purse in the Acropolis’s Placa neighborhood, which absolutely had to be recreated in glass form the next show. Can you say high hilarity? It only got better when Bob gave me a mystery box during last night’s show. I opened it with a bit of trepidation since I thought a party snake might pop out at me. Inside was the matching purple kitty coin purse! I screamed a little (on the microphone) with excitement and told everyone the history of my love of purple and cats and how the two together are the best combination ever. Bob got a big old hug, even though he was right in the middle of making a beautiful vase.

Ryan with purple kitty purse

Purple kitty purse and glass replica