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Set De Verre Saint Louis

Roses dans un verre - Post Impressionist Still Life Oil Painting by Albert Andre
By Albert Andre
Located in Marlow, Buckinghamshire
billionaire investor T. Boone Pickens (1928-2019) Phillips - Saint Louis MO, United States (6th May 2001) He
Category

Early 1900s Post-Impressionist Still-life Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

CHANEL GRIPOIX 1950, NECKLACE and BRACELET, gadrooned gilt beads, Gripoix glass
By Maison Gripoix for Chanel
Located in SAINT-CLOUD, FR
forgetting Givenchy, Balmain, Lacroix, Loulou de la Falaise, Nina Ricci and Louis Vuitton… . FR: Ensemble
Category

Vintage 1950s French Beaded Necklaces

Materials

Mixed Metal

Emile Galle Leaves And Pods Art Nouveau Tall Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
items are not as described. Please also consider Avantiques eclectic Art Glass and Pate De Verre
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Emile Galle French Art Nouveau Soufflé Berry Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
Nouveau furniture, and was a founder of the École de Nancy or Nancy School, a movement of design in the
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

People Also Browsed

Rare Victorian Firescreen with Taxidermy Hummingbirds by Henry Ward
By Henry Ward
Located in Amsterdam, NL
England, third quarter of the 19th century On two scrolling foliate feet with casters, above which a rectangular two-side glazed frame, with on top a two-sided shield with initial...
Category

Antique Mid-19th Century English High Victorian Taxidermy

Materials

Other

Muller Freres Luneville Cameo Landscape vase 1900
By Muller Fres Lunneville
Located in Dallas, TX
A sumptuous art nouveau French cameo lake landscape acid etched cameo vase with applied handles. Sunrise or sunset with a yellow orange background with engraved trees, bushes and mou...
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Emile Galle Hydrangea Cameo Covered Dish
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
Gallé Cameo glass wheel carved and acid etched hydrangeas covered box, circa 1910. Art Nouveau. Marks: (star) Gallé (1904-1907) Height: 3 Inches, diameter 5.75 inches (7.4 x 14...
Category

Antique Early 1900s Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Emile Galle Fire Polished Tall Stemmed Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
Tall Early Gallé Fire-Polished Cameo Glass Solifleur Vase, circa 1900 Signed: In Japonism script “gallé” Height: 12.4 inches (31.5 cm) Tall vase with pendant redcurrants and folia...
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Monumental 24’ Emile Galle Four Color Cameo Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
Large and finely carved Four color Gallé Cameo glass floral floor vase, circa 1910, art Nouveau. Marks: Gallé Measures: Height: 24.35 inches (62 cm) Diameter: 9.75 inches Condit...
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

l.c.t Tiffany Studios Jack in the Pulpit Favrile Floriform Vase
By Louis Comfort Tiffany
Located in Dallas, TX
This tall and rare Tiffany Studios jack in the pulpit vase has an inverted saucer foot with opalescent wafer transition stem to foot. The transparent green glass stem leads to the bo...
Category

Antique Early 1900s American Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Émile Gallé Alpine Glass Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in New Orleans, LA
Exceptional in both size and artistry, this sand-polished cameo art glass vase from the famed Art Nouveau master Émile Gallé features an exceedingly rare alpine scene. The artist's l...
Category

Early 20th Century French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Émile Gallé Alpine Glass Vase
Émile Gallé Alpine Glass Vase
H 17.5 in W 13 in D 6 in
Emile Galle Art Nouveau Cameo Floral Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
Emile Galle wheel carved and acid etched cameo glass vase. This particular case has killer colors and outstanding workmanship. The pink and green combination on the cream background ...
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Yves Saint Laurent YSL by Robert Goossens Vintage Perfume Bottle Necklace
By Yves Saint Laurent
Located in Nice, FR
YVES SAINT LAURENT vintage rare necklace created for the launch of the perfume CHAMPAGNE by ROBERT GOOSSENS. This textured links chain necklace is embellished with rock crystal bead...
Category

20th Century French Beaded Necklaces

Materials

Gilt Metal

CoCo Chanel Maison Gripoix Glass Enamel Flower Necklace
By Maison Gripoix for Chanel
Located in New York, NY
Magnificent Chanel poured glass enamel flower necklace. Made by Maison Gripoix of opaline and opal blue glass camellias and camellia buds . Further embellished with pale emerald pour...
Category

Vintage 1950s French Romantic Drop Necklaces

Materials

Gilt Metal, Gold Plate, Bronze, Enamel

Antique French Art Nouveau Fire Polished Cameo Glass Emile Gallé Stem Vase, 1900
By Émile Gallé
Located in Portland, OR
A fine antique French Art Nouveau Emille Galle cameo glass vase, circa 1900. The stem vase of a tapering conical form and finely wheel carved and acid etched & fire polished, the cam...
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Glass

French Art Nouveau Table Lamp by Emile Galle ''Vosges Paysage'' Cameo Glass 1900
By Émile Gallé
Located in Ijzendijke, NL
Breathtaking French Art Nouveau table lamp by Emile Gallé early 1900 model: ''Vosges Paysage'' simply exquisite. Multilayer glass lamp with engraved decoration in brilliant reserve...
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Table Lamps

Materials

Bronze

GALLE Art Nouveau Mushroom lamp in multilayer glass
By Gallé
Located in TEYJAT, FR
Establishment Gallé, Art Nouveau Mushroom lamp in multilayer glass with acid-etched landscape decoration in blues, greens and yellow. Signed Gallé. Dimensions: h. 36cm The lamp is i...
Category

Early 20th Century French Art Nouveau Table Lamps

Materials

Glass

Antique French Impressionist Portrait Painting Gathering Flowers Oil Painting
Located in Buffalo, NY
Vintage impressionist oil painting by Pierre Eugène Duteurtre (1911 - 1989). Oil on canvas, circa 1970. Signed. Displayed in a period frame. Image, 22"L x 18"H.
Category

1960s Impressionist Portrait Paintings

Materials

Oil, Canvas

Art Nouveau Cameo Vase with Sweet Pea Decor, Émile Gallé, Nancy, France, 1903/04
By Émile Gallé
Located in Vienna, AT
Flush foot, raised, widening body with a shoulder-shaped narrowing at the top, with a short, wide neck and flared, rounded mouth rim. Burgundy red overlay on the outside, etched leaf...
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Glass

Materials

Glass

Walk Around The City French Post Impressionist
Located in Lake Worth Beach, FL
Walk Around The City, signed in original French gilt wood frame. Maxime Boulard de Villeneuve (1884 - 1971) is a French artist born in Paris who was influenced in the early 1900s’...
Category

1960s Post-Impressionist Landscape Paintings

Materials

Oil, Panel

Recent Sales

Emile Galle Cameo Art Nouveau Iris Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
consider Avantiques eclectic Art Glass and Pate De Verre collection including Emile Galle, Daum Nancy
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Large Emile Galle Fire Polished Floral Art Nouveau Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
Art Glass and Pate De Verre collection including Emile Galle, Daum Nancy, Schneider, Argy Rousseau
Category

Antique 1890s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Emile Galle Mold Blown Wild Rose Art Nouveau Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
and Pate De Verre collection including Emile Galle, Daum Nancy, Schneider, Argy Rousseau, Almeric
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Emile Gallé Cameo Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
eclectic Art Glass and Pate De Verre collection including Emile Galle, Daum Nancy, Schneider, Argy
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Emile Gallé Cameo Vase
Emile Gallé Cameo Vase
H 14.2 in Dm 4 in
Emile Galle Cameo Art Nouveau Floral Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
. Please also consider Avantiques eclectic Art Glass and Pate De Verre collection including Emile Galle
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Emile Galle Crocus Mold Blown Soufflé Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
Art Glass and Pate De Verre collection including Emile Galle, Daum Nancy, Schneider, Argy Rousseau
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

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Émile Gallé for sale on 1stDibs

“Art for art’s sake” was a belief strongly espoused by the celebrated French designer and glassworker Émile Gallé. Through his ethereal glass vases, other vessels and lamps, which he adorned with botanical and religious motifs, Gallé advanced the Art Nouveau ideology and led the modern renaissance of French glass.

Gallé was the son of successful faience and furniture maker Charles Gallé but studied philosophy and botany before coming to glassmaking later in life. The young Gallé’s expertise in botany, however, would inform his design style and become his signature for generations to come.

After learning the art of glassmaking, Gallé went to work at his father’s factory in Nancy. He initially created clear glass objects but later began to experiment with layering deeply colored glass.

While glassmakers on Murano had applied layers of glass and color on decorative objects before Gallé had, he was ever-venturesome in his northeastern France, taking advantage of defects that materialized during his processes and etching in natural forms like insects such as dragonflies, marine life, the sun, vines, fruits and flowers modeled from local specimens.

Gallé is also credited with reviving cameo glass, a glassware style that originated in Rome. He used cabochons, which were applied raised-glass decorations colored with metallic oxides and made to resemble rich jeweling. Gallé's cameo glass vases and vessels were widely popular at the Paris Exhibition of 1878, cementing his position as a talented designer and pioneer.

During the late 19th century, Gallé led breakthroughs in mass production and employed hundreds of artisans in his workshop.

Botany and nature remained great sources of inspiration for the artist's glassmaking — just as they had for other Art Nouveau designers. From approximately 1890 to 1910, the movement’s talented designers produced furniture, glass and architecture in the form of — or adorned with — gently intertwining trees, flowers and vines. But Gallé had many interests, such as Eastern art and ceramics. The Japanese collection he visited at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London (then the South Kensington Museum) during the 1870s had made an impression too.

Breaking free from the rigid Victorian traditions, Gallé infused new life and spirit into the art and design of his time through exquisitely crafted glass vessels and pioneering new glassworking techniques.

Find a collection of Émile Gallé vases and other furniture and decorative objects on 1stDibs.

A Close Look at art-nouveau Furniture

In its sinuous lines and flamboyant curves inspired by the natural world, antique Art Nouveau furniture reflects a desire for freedom from the stuffy social and artistic strictures of the Victorian era. The Art Nouveau movement developed in the decorative arts in France and Britain in the early 1880s and quickly became a dominant aesthetic style in Western Europe and the United States.

ORIGINS OF ART NOUVEAU FURNITURE DESIGN

CHARACTERISTICS OF ART NOUVEAU FURNITURE DESIGN

  • Sinuous, organic and flowing lines
  • Forms that mimic flowers and plant life
  • Decorative inlays and ornate carvings of natural-world motifs such as insects and animals 
  • Use of hardwoods such as oak, mahogany and rosewood

ART NOUVEAU FURNITURE DESIGNERS TO KNOW

ANTIQUE ART NOUVEAU FURNITURE ON 1STDIBS

Art Nouveau — which spanned furniture, architecture, jewelry and graphic design — can be easily identified by its lush, flowing forms suggested by flowers and plants, as well as the lissome tendrils of sea life. Although Art Deco and Art Nouveau were both in the forefront of turn-of-the-20th-century design, they are very different styles — Art Deco is marked by bold, geometric shapes while Art Nouveau incorporates dreamlike, floral motifs. The latter’s signature motif is the "whiplash" curve — a deep, narrow, dynamic parabola that appears as an element in everything from chair arms to cabinetry and mirror frames.

The visual vocabulary of Art Nouveau was particularly influenced by the soft colors and abstract images of nature seen in Japanese art prints, which arrived in large numbers in the West after open trade was forced upon Japan in the 1860s. Impressionist artists were moved by the artistic tradition of Japanese woodblock printmaking, and Japonisme — a term used to describe the appetite for Japanese art and culture in Europe at the time — greatly informed Art Nouveau. 

The Art Nouveau style quickly reached a wide audience in Europe via advertising posters, book covers, illustrations and other work by such artists as Aubrey Beardsley, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec and Alphonse Mucha. While all Art Nouveau designs share common formal elements, different countries and regions produced their own variants.

In Scotland, the architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh developed a singular, restrained look based on scale rather than ornament; a style best known from his narrow chairs with exceedingly tall backs, designed for Glasgow tea rooms. Meanwhile in France, Hector Guimard — whose iconic 1896 entry arches for the Paris Metro are still in use — and Louis Majorelle produced chairs, desks, bed frames and cabinets with sweeping lines and rich veneers. 

The Art Nouveau movement was known as Jugendstil ("Youth Style") in Germany, and in Austria the designers of the Vienna Secession group — notably Koloman Moser, Josef Hoffmann and Joseph Maria Olbrich — produced a relatively austere iteration of the Art Nouveau style, which mixed curving and geometric elements.

Art Nouveau revitalized all of the applied arts. Ceramists such as Ernest Chaplet and Edmond Lachenal created new forms covered in novel and rediscovered glazes that produced thick, foam-like finishes. Bold vases, bowls and lighting designs in acid-etched and marquetry cameo glass by Émile Gallé and the Daum Freres appeared in France, while in New York the glass workshop-cum-laboratory of Louis Comfort Tiffany — the core of what eventually became a multimedia decorative-arts manufactory called Tiffany Studios — brought out buoyant pieces in opalescent favrile glass. 

Jewelry design was revolutionized, as settings, for the first time, were emphasized as much as, or more than, gemstones. A favorite Art Nouveau jewelry motif was insects (think of Tiffany, in his famed Dragonflies glass lampshade).

Like a mayfly, Art Nouveau was short-lived. The sensuous, languorous style fell out of favor early in the 20th century, deemed perhaps too light and insubstantial for European tastes in the aftermath of World War I. But as the designs on 1stDibs demonstrate, Art Nouveau retains its power to fascinate and seduce.

There are ways to tastefully integrate a touch of Art Nouveau into even the most modern interior — browse an extraordinary collection of original antique Art Nouveau furniture on 1stDibs, which includes decorative objects, seating, tables, garden elements and more.

Finding the Right vases for You

Whether it’s a Chinese Han dynasty glazed ceramic wine vessel, a work of Murano glass or a hand-painted Scandinavian modern stoneware piece, a fine vase brings a piece of history into your space as much as it adds a sophisticated dynamic. 

Like sculptures or paintings, antique and vintage vases are considered works of fine art. Once offered as tributes to ancient rulers, vases continue to be gifted to heads of state today. Over time, decorative porcelain vases have become family heirlooms to be displayed prominently in our homes — loved pieces treasured from generation to generation.

The functional value of vases is well known. They were traditionally utilized as vessels for carrying dry goods or liquids, so some have handles and feature an opening at the top (where they flare back out). While artists have explored wildly sculptural alternatives over time, the most conventional vase shape is characterized by a bulbous base and a body with shoulders where the form curves inward.

Owing to their intrinsic functionality, vases are quite possibly versatile in ways few other art forms can match. They’re typically taller than they are wide. Some have a neck that offers height and is ideal for the stems of cut flowers. To pair with your mid-century modern decor, the right vase will be an elegant receptacle for leafy snake plants on your teak dining table, or, in the case of welcoming guests on your doorstep, a large ceramic floor vase for long tree branches or sticks — perhaps one crafted in the Art Nouveau style — works wonders.

Interior designers include vases of every type, size and style in their projects — be the canvas indoors or outdoors — often introducing a splash of color and a range of textures to an entryway or merely calling attention to nature’s asymmetries by bringing more organically shaped decorative objects into a home.

On 1stDibs, you can browse our collection of vases by material, including ceramic, glass, porcelain and more. Sizes range from tiny bud vases to massive statement pieces and every size in between.