Ewer with Lion Mask (adult-technique) [electronic resource] / Corning Museum of Glass.

Ewer with Lion Mask (adult-technique) [electronic resource] / Corning Museum of Glass.

America's castles. The coal barons: Craigdarroch Castle, Linden Hall & Blithewold [videorecording] / Cinetel Productions in association with A & E Television Network; Robert J. Jordan, producer.
Daniel Clayman [videorecording]: Colure 2009, Swan Point Cemetery, Redwood Mausoleum / Montague Studios, Ltd.
 
 
Print
 
Other Authors: 
Gudenrath, William
Corning Museum of Glass.
Publisher: 
Corning, N.Y. : Corning Museum of Glass, 2011.
Subjects: 
Corning Museum of Glass.
Filigrana glass Italy Murano Technique.
Glass blowing and working History.
Glass blowing and working Technique.
Decorative glass processes.
Record Number
Bib ID: 
131679
View Full Record and Availability
 
Description
1 streaming video file (2 min.) : digital, sd., col.
Notes
Not commercially distributed.
Glass artist William Gudenrath describes the cane work (or filigrana) technique used to make this ewer. This Venetian ewer is made with milk glass canes and decorated with applied lion-mask prunts (small ornaments that are like medallions stuck to the outside of a vessel). Differently patterned milk glass canes were, and are, used to make glass vessels that have been fashionable ever since the 16th and 17th centuries. Initially, glass canes are "pulled" and joined before any object is shaped. The lace or net patterned reticello glass uses two layers of canes joined on top of each other at a 90-degree angle. The Venetian glassmakers took their skill to new heights by using these canework techniques, and they manufactured glass objects that show both simpler straight canes and overlayed patterns. Some of the pieces on display in this section are made from canes and are also mold-blown to give the body shape a decorative form. Other objects profit from applied prunts.
Narrator, William Gudenrath, resident advisor, The Studio, The Corning Museum of Glass.
Title from resource description page.
Mode of access: internet.
This video is featured in the Museum's app. Download the app from iTunes or the Android Marketplace to learn more about objects in the Museum's collection and some of the techniques used to make them.
Object/Material Note: 
Related to CMoG object: 64.3.20.