glass: Beginnings of the Modern Era
Beginnings of the Modern Era
The invention of a glass-pressing machine (c.1827), used by the American manufacturer Deming Jarves in his Boston and Sandwich Glass Company (1825–88), permitted the manufacturing of inexpensive and mass-produced glass articles. Nevertheless, there has remained a sense of pride in individual craftsmanship. The American artist Louis C. Tiffany was responsible for the design and manufacture of an extraordinary iridescent glass used in a variety of objects in the late 1800s. Exceptionally fine blown glassware has been designed by such artists as René Lalique and Maurice Marinot in France, Edvard Hald and Simon Gate in Sweden, and Sidney Waugh in the United States. Monumental works of sculpture in glass have been made by Dale Chihuly, Czech artists Jaroslava Brychtova and Stanislav Libensky, and others.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Contemporary Applications of Glass
- Beginnings of the Modern Era
- Glassmaking in Colonial America
- Early European Glassmaking
- Ancient Glassmaking
- Development of the Glass Industry
- The Process of Glassmaking
- Composition and Properties of Glass
- Bibliography
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2024, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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