Research Catalog
Charles Schneider : French art deco glass
- Title
- Charles Schneider : French art deco glass / Tiny Esveld, Marie-Christine Joulin ; [English translation, Susan Wise].
- Author
- Esveld, Tiny.
- Publication
- [Rijkevorsel] : [Galerie Tiny Esveld], [2015]
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Text | Use in library | NK5198.S29 A4 2015g | Off-site |
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Details
- Additional Authors
- Description
- 288 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), portraits; 30 cm +
- Summary
- In 1924 the Schneider glassworks build the biggest concrete hall ever with the most modern furnaces. In 1926 they are the biggest glass factory in France, with almost 500 employees. In 1925 Charles was asked to be a member of the jury at the Exposition des Art Decoratifs in Paris. His coupe bijoux and the big black footed bowls in contrasting colours were an enormous success all over the world. Most of their production went to North and South America. The glass of Charles Schneider has such joyful colours, bright and happy colours like orange and yellow. It looks like the sun shines every day. The little bijoux vases are jewels of technique and shape and colour. The "Le verre Francais" line had a great success with the stylized flowers in stunning colours. As the majority of the Le verre francais glass was only etched one time, the producing costs were low. The general public loved these bright vases. The success of the Schneider factory continued until 1929. In 1929 the banks on Wall street crashed and rich people lost a lot or all of their money. The market for luxury goods collapsed. Schneider tried to survive by cutting down costs, but this does not help when there are no buyers left. After a struggle of a three years the furnace extinguised in 1932. The factory filed for bankruptcy in 1938. Charles Schneider died in 1953 before the revival of his glass. In the eighties his glass was rediscovered. It has its place now among Galle and Daum glass as their equivalent.
- Subjects
- Genre/Form
- Catalogs.
- Note
- "It was at Nancy that Charles Schneider (1881-1953) trained in the Daum glassworks at the height of the École de Nancy period. In 1913 he founded with his brother Ernest the Verreries Schneider company at Épinay-sur-Seine. This book shows in its rich variety the production of one of the greatest glassworks between the two World Wars, presenting many works as yet unpublished or unknown. They all bear evidence to the genius of one man, a pioneer of art deco in his field, whose creative activity was at once original and colourful"--Back cover.
- Accompanied by a supplement containing the text and captions in French.
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references (p. 287).
- Language (note)
- English and French.
- Contents
- Introduction / Tiny Esveld -- Foreword / Marie-Christine Joulin -- Preface / Marie-Thérèse Decker -- Charles Schneider, a glass pyrotechnist -- The Schneider line -- The Verre français line -- Glossary.
- ISBN
- 9789081577663
- 9081577662
- OCLC
- ocn932068731
- 932068731
- SCSB-5844367
- Owning Institutions
- Columbia University Libraries