Navajo Blanket Cylinder (Full Wrap Pueblo Cylinder)

Title: 
Navajo Blanket Cylinder (Full Wrap Pueblo Cylinder)

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Object Name: 
Vessel
Title: 
Navajo Blanket Cylinder (Full Wrap Pueblo Cylinder)
Accession Number: 
2007.4.143
Dimensions: 
Overall H: 23 cm, Diam (max): 19.7 cm
Location: 
On Display
Date: 
1975
Credit Line: 
Gift of the Ben W. Heineman Sr. Family
Web Description: 
This cylinder is of the “peachblow” variety that were fashioned out of a special formulation of opaque brownish pink glass. The drawing was made with colored glass threads, arranged on a steel table with the aid of a hand-held torch. They were first made by Chihuly’s student Kate Elliott and then by Flora Mace. Chihuly shaped a thick-walled cylinder on the blowpipe, and then he carefully picked up the drawing onto the glass while the threads were still hot. At the end of 1976, Chihuly moved on to new work inspired by traditional Native American baskets. He says: “Both the drawing pickup technique that led to the Navajo Blanket Cylinders and a new way of blowing very thin and misshapen basket forms derived from Indian sources. These became two of the most influential series that I created.”
Provenance: 
Chihuly, Dale (American, b. 1941), Former Collection
1999
Heineman, Ben W. Sr. Family, Source
Color: 
Material: 
Primary Description: 
Blown glass, assembled threads picked up while hot.
Venue(s)
Corning Museum of Glass
Contemporary Glass Gallery and Changing Exhibitions Gallery
Voices of Contemporary Glass: The Heineman Collection (2009) illustrated, p. 102, pl. 27; BIB# 109983
Fire: Dale Chihuly (2006) illustrated, p. 30; BIB# 95675
Chihuly: Taos Pueblo (1999) illustrated, p. 33; BIB# 64346
Magic of Chihuly Glass (1997) illustrated, p. 27;