Description: Blown milk glass mug with a cover with finial painted in red, yellow, blue, pink, and green enamels. In the third quarter of the 17th century, French, German and Bohemian glassmakers developed formulae, such as Johann Kunckel's 1679 recipe for opal glass, to produce an opaque white glass - "milchglas" - that imitated white porcelain or china. "Glass china" was an early 19th century term for what is is currently called "milk glass". The mug has a band of red oblique lines forming triangles around the top and parallel lines around the base; a scrolled cartouche with a large building with a tall tower, flanked with 2 tall trees; and elaborate floral sprays on each side of the handle. The cylindrical mug flares sharply at the base; has an applied rounded loop handle with a tooled terminal; and rough pontil mark. The cover is decorated with floral sprays.
Subjects: Enamel and enameling; Glass; polychrome Link to share this object record: https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=HD+54.196 |