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AN 19TH CENTURY RIBBON TWIST STEMMED BELL BOWL WINE GLASS 16cm high, a ribbon twist wine glass, a fold over foot glass and three other antique glasses (6) Condition Report:"AN 19TH CENTURY RIBBON TWIST STEMMED BELL BOWL WINE GLASSnice condition, no issuesa ribbon twist wine glass - chips to base rim and flaw just under bowla fold over foot glass - rough pontil, bubbles in glassgreen hock glass - no issueschampagne glass - fold over foot, slight flaw to stemtrumpet bowl glass, bubbles in stem"
Dagobert Peche (attributed), a Secessionist enamelled glass footed jar and cover, probably made by Johann Oertel, Haida circa 1918, for the Wiener Werkstatte, the rounded bowl with knopped and splayed foot, the domed lid with ball finial, banded with concentric rings in graduated orange, black and yellow enamel, 16.5cm high Note: Austrian artist and designer Dagobert Peche designed textiles, enamelled glass and ceramics for the Wiener Werkstatte, many with similar concentric rings of fading colours.
Gordon Russell (attributed) for Stevens and Williams, a Lygon style wine glass, circa 1920, the optic conical bowl on wrythen twist stem and conical foot, acid mark Brierley, 13.5cm high Note: Gordon Russell designed a series of drinking glasses based on traditional 18th and 19th century designs, for the Stourbridge glass factory Stevens and Williams (known as Royal Brierley)
A Roman opaque red glass patella cup Early 1st Century A.D.The ring-footed bowl with rounded base and carinated profile, slightly flared at the rim, 9.4cm diam.Footnotes:Provenance:The Alfred Wolkenberg (d. 1990) Collection, New York. The Alfred Wolkenberg Collection of Ancient Glass, Christie's, London, 9 July 1991, lot 100. Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 17 October 1996, lot 30. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 041), acquired from the above sale. Published: Antiek Glas 2001, video film Allard Pierson Museum of Antiquities, Amsterdam. Exhibited: Thermenmuseum, Heerlen, NL, 'Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit', 29 April – 28 August 2011, exhibition no.03.Allard Pierson Museum of Antiquities, Amsterdam, 'Antiek Glas, de Kunst van Het Vuur', 17 May - 16 September 2001, exhibition no.19.The shape of this cup was a popular early Roman Imperial form that was produced in both opaque coloured glass and mosaic glass. For a similar opaque glass bowl, cf. E.M. Stern, Early Glass of the Ancient World, 1600 B.C.-A.D. 50 1994, pp.328-9, no.99. See also David Frederick Grose, Early Ancient Glass. Core-formed, rod-formed and cast vessels and objects from the late bronze age to the early roman empire, 1600 B.C. to A.D.50 (Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo, Ohio 1989), no.419. Grose family III.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman streaky purple glass ribbed bowl Mid-1st Century A.D.Free-blown and decorated with applied and marvered opaque white spiral trail starting on the underside of the base with sixteen irregular vertical and angled ribs pincered out of the vessel wall, with a cracked-off rim, 6.3cm high Footnotes:Provenance:Anonymous sale; Gorny & Mosch, Munich, 14 December 2007, lot 67. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 208), acquired from the above sale.Exhibited: Museum Dordts Patriciërshuis, Dordrecht, NL, 'Glas Door de Eeuwen Heen', 11 April – 11 November 2018.These delicately ribbed bowls, zarte Rippenschalen, were decorated with marvered opaque trail and ribs pincered out of the vessel wall. The purple streaks in this example are created by the uneven mixing of the manganese oxide in the glass batch. The spiral effect of the colouring was caused by the rotation of the glass paraison while being picked up from the crucible and blown. There is a similar example in The J. Paul Getty Museum, collection no.2004.20, and another in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, acc.no.81.10.239.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman pale green glass footed dish circa 1st Century A.D.The shallow bowl with straight slightly flaring sides, on a pedestal base, with pontil mark on the underside of the base, 24.5cm diamFootnotes:Provenance:Archaeological Center Ltd, Jaffa, Auction 61, 20 October 2016, lot 349.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 341), acquired from the above sale.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Two small Roman glass bowls Late 1st - early 2nd Century A.D.A purple streaked glass bowl and a blue-green glass bowl each with folded collar rims, on circular pad bases, 4cm and 3.4cm high (2)Footnotes:Provenance:Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 17 October 1996, lot 31. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 042), acquired from the above sale.The Latin name of this small bowl or cup is 'acetabulum', derived from the Latin word acetum, meaning vinegar. It served as tableware to serve (vinegar) sauces. Such bowls are closely related to the cast monochrome and mosaic patella cups. The blown forms could be produced far more easily in vast quantities and became very popular in early Roman times.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman pale green glass bowl Circa 2nd-3rd Century A.D.The rim with two handles formed by applied ribbed coils on the folded rim, the curved bowl set on a tubular base-ring, 11.5cm diam.Footnotes:Provenance:V.W. Collection, Basel, Switzerland, purchased in London between 1974-1976. With Archea Ancient Art, Amsterdam.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 221), acquired from the above on the 17 June 2008.Exhibition:Museum Dordts Patriciërshuis, Dordrecht, NL, 'Glas Door de Eeuwen Heen', 11 April – 11 November 2018.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman pale green glass carchesium Circa late 3rd-4th Century A.D.The carinated bowl flaring slightly to the rim, the tapering lower half of the body set on a conical foot, 8.2cm highFootnotes:Provenance: François de Ricqlès, Paris Archéologie, 22-23 April 2001, lot 588.Private Collection, P.L.W. Arts.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 113), acquired from the above on the 5 January 2002.Published:P.L. Wilhelmus, A Collection of Ancient Glass, 500 BC-500 AD, Lochem, 2000, no.69.Exhibition:Thermenmuseum, Heerlen, NL, 'Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit', 29 April – 28 August 2011, exhibition no.53.For the type, cf. D. Whitehouse, Roman glass in the Corning Museum of Glass, Volume I, New York, 1997, p.77, no.98.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman yellow-green glass shallow bowl Western Empire, circa 4th Century A.D.With thick walls, the moulded rim pincered four times to create a square, the walls decorated with applied trailing to create a band of lozenges between two horizontal lines, on an applied pad base, 11cm diam.Footnotes:Provenance:With Axel G. Weber Kunsthandel, Cologne, Germany, 2003.Paul E. Cuperus Collection, Laren, Netherlands. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 254), acquired from the above on the 6 March 2010.Published:J. v.d. Groen & H. van Rossum, Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit, Utrecht, 2011, p.32.P. E. Cuperus, Glass from the Roman Empire, 2009, p.77. no.PEC 066.Exhibited:Thermenmuseum, Heerlen, NL, 'Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit', 29 April – 28 August 2011, exhibition no.27.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman pale green glass hemispherical bowl Circa 4th Century A.D.The deep bowl with a cut-off and ground rim, with four wheel-cut bands along the exterior, one around the rim, two framing a band of twenty applied and marvered deep blue blobs, a final band above the base, the bottom slightly pushed in, 8cm high, 12.2cm diamFootnotes:Provenance:Sergey Antonoshkin Collection, Düsseldorf, Germany, 1960s.David G. Giles (1940-2022) Collection, London, UK.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 227), acquired from the above on the 2 February 2009.Published:Thermenmuseum Magazine, Museumtijdschrift, no.4, June/July 2011, pp.28-29. Exhibited:Thermenmuseum, Heerlen, NL, 'Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit', 29 April–28 August 2011, exhibition no.55.A similar cup in the British Museum formerly in the L.P. di Cesnola and Felix Slade Collections, was found in Cyprus together with a shallow bowl with matching decoration (D. B. Harden et al., Glass of the Caesars, Milan, 1987, p.113, no.46). The high quality of the decoration on these pieces and on another example, also from Cyprus, in the Birmingham City Museum and Art Gallery, suggests that these are early examples of a type of decoration that continued into the 5th Century A.D.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Three late Roman - early Byzantine glass vessels circa 5th-6th Century A.D.A lamp in the form of a deep bowl, with a thick tubular rim and three applied handles, the cylindrical wick emerging upright from the base interior, 9cm high; a bulb-shaped lamp with striated decoration, 9.6cm high, and a pale yellow-green glass pear-shaped flask with tall funnel neck, 12.6cm high (3)Footnotes:Provenance:Three-handled oil lamp: Archaeological Center Ltd, Jaffa, Auction 30, 15 October 2003, lot 209.Bulb-shaped oil lamp: with Christopher Sheppard, London, 1989.With Artemission, London.Anonymous sale; Artemission, London, 11 October 2017, lot 71.Pear-shaped flask: private collection, New Jersey, USA, 1990s.Artemis Gallery, Louisville, Colorado, Clearance Sale-Ancient/Ethnographic Art, 1 February 2018, lot 22B. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 158, NFB 363 & NFB 365). All acquired from the above.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
An Achaemenid colourless cast glass shallow bowl Western Asiatic, probably Persia, late 4th Century B.C.The thick cast bowl with a wheel-cut groove on the interior below the flaring rim, decorated on the exterior with twenty-one petals, each with a medial rib, emanating from a circle around the middle of the dish, the base with slight indentation, 12.2cm diamFootnotes:Provenance:With Joseph Uzan, Paris. SVV Enchères Rive Gauche, Paris, Sale 194, , 19-20 November 2012, lot 318.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 280), acquired from the above sale.The form of this vessel comes from metal and especially silver prototypes, while the fine colourless glass was made in imitation of rock crystal. Both similar glass examples in The Corning Museum of Glass and the Toledo Museum of Art are larger, at 17.5 cm and 17.3cm in diameter respectively. The former has an omphalos in the centre of the base, is earlier, circa 450-400 BC, with the indentation on the underside of the base affording a better grip of the drinking bowl. The glass bowl in Toledo, which is dated to the late 4th Century B.C., also has similar wheel-cut elongated petals with rounded ends. See Sidney M. Goldstein, Pre-Roman and Early Roman Glass in The Corning Museum of Glass (Corning, NY, 1979), p.118, no.248. For another example, with more flaring rim, dated to the 4th Century B.C., cf, David F. Grose, Early Ancient Glass. The Toledo Museum of Art (New York, 1989), p.87, nos.34a & b.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Hellenistic amber-green cast glass lobed bowl Circa 3rd-2nd Century B.C. The deep bowl with a flaring rim and two pairs of wheel-cut bands on the exterior, with twelve uneven lobes alternating with wheel-cut petals radiating from a circle on the underside of the base, which contains a six-pointed star, 17.2cm diamFootnotes:Provenance:Mr Brailovsky Collection, Germany, 1989.David G. Giles (1940-2022) Collection, London, UK. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 339), acquired from the above on the 11 October 2016. Exhibited: The National Museum of Antiquities, Leiden, NL, 'Glass', 1 June 2020 – 28 February 2021.A similar bowl in colourless glass with a greyish tinge and decorated with fins and wheel-cut petals in The Corning Museum of Glass has been assigned a possible Persian origin, but to a date after the Achaemenid Empire was conquered by Alexander the Great. Achaemenid glass tends to be colourless, while the amber colour of this glass is more indicative of a Hellenistic date. See Sidney M. Goldstein, Pre-Roman and Early Roman Glass in The Corning Museum of Glass (Corning, NY, 1979), pp.134-5, no.277.It is also related to two colourless bowls in the British Museum dated to 225-200 B.C., that have a row of protruding short ribs or fins above a design of cut lotus petals that come from an early Hellenistic chamber tomb at Canosa di Puglia, in southern Italy, which also contained incredible examples of sandwich gold-glass. See Veronica Tatton-Brown, Hellenistic glass in the British Museum, in George Kordas (ed.), Hyalos Vitrum Glass, History, Technology and Conservation of Glass and Vitreous Materials in the Hellenic World (Athens 2002), p.92, fig.3.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Hellenistic cast amber glass mammiform bowl Mid-2nd - early 1st Century B.C.The deep conical bowl with cast rim, the interior with a band of three wheel-cut grooves, the base engraved with a central linear rosette within a circle, 15.1cm diamFootnotes:Provenance:Anonymous sale; Bonhams, London, 26 November 1997, lot 149. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 064), acquired from the above sale.Published: J. v.d. Groen & H. van Rossum, Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit, Utrecht, 2011, p.21.Antiek Glas 2001, video film Allard Pierson Museum of Antiquities, Amsterdam.R. van Beek, Antiek Glas: De Kunst van Het Vuur, Amsterdam, 2001, p.8, pl.25.Exhibited: Allard Pierson Museum of Antiquities, Amsterdam, 'Antiek Glas, de Kunst van Het Vuur', 17 May – 16 September 2001, exhibition no.27.This bowl belongs to a group of mid-Hellenistic cast drinking vessels or grooved bowls made on the Syro-Palestinian coast from the mid-2nd to early 1st century BC. The deep cut grooves are usually arranged in bands of two or three on the interior.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman pale blue-green glass ribbed bowl Late 1st Century B.C. - mid-1st Century A.D.Cast with sixty-seven vertical ribs, the interior with three concentric wheel-cut grooves at the junction of the lower wall and base, with a small circle in the centre of the base, 16.2cm diam.Footnotes:Provenance: Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 13 December 1995, lot 32. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 015), acquired from the above sale.Cf. C. Isings, Roman Glass from Dated Finds (1957), 17-19. Isings form 3c.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
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87294 item(s)/page