Art Deco Mottled Vermillion Glass Vase W/ Wrought Iron by Majorelle & Daum
View Similar Items
Art Deco Mottled Vermillion Glass Vase W/ Wrought Iron by Majorelle & Daum
About the Item
- Creator:Charles Schneider (Maker)
- Dimensions:Height: 10.5 in (26.67 cm)Diameter: 11 in (27.94 cm)Length: 10.5 in (26.67 cm)
- Style:Art Deco (Of the Period)
- Materials and Techniques:
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:circa 1930
- Condition:
- Seller Location:New York, NY
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU793410059111
Charles Schneider
The Schneider Glassworks (Verreries Schneider), established by brothers Charles and Ernest Schneider in Epinay-sur-Seine, France, in 1917, was among the leading producers of fine-art glass between the two world wars, creating exuberantly colorful vessels and lighting fixtures in both the Art Nouveau and Art Deco styles. The factory’s highpoint was the 1920s, when it created iconic chandeliers and exquisitely decorated cameo glass vases that are still in high demand today.
Born in the last quarter of the 19th century in Château-Thierry, near Paris, Charles and Ernest Schneider moved with their family at a young age to Nancy, a major center of Art Nouveau design, particularly known for glass. Among the city’s master makers was the crystal studio Daum, where both brothers worked at the turn of the 20th century, Ernest in sales, and Charles receiving training in the engraving and decoration workshop, while concurrently learning drawing and modeling with Henri Bergé and attending the École des Beaux-Arts in Nancy. In 1904, he enrolled at the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts, in Paris, where he studied painting and metal engraving and regularly showed in the engraving section of the Salon de la Société des Artistes Français, twice receiving a prize.
Around 1912 the brothers and their friend, architect Henri Wolf, bought a small glass factory specializing in lightbulbs, renaming it Schneider Frères et Wolff. The partners enticed a group of about 20 workers from the Daum workshop to join the company, which produced high-quality cameo vases and lamps until the outbreak of World War I, in 1914, when Charles, Ernest and most of the workers were called up to fight. The Schneiders were demobbed in 1917 and reopened the factory, initially making practical glassware for hospitals. After the war, to fund their reentry into the art-glass market, they sold shares in the company, now named the Société Anonyme des Verreries Schneider. The success of the elegant drinking glasses and Art Nouveau-style cameo vases they produced allowed the brothers to buy back the shares, at which point they renamed the factory Verreries Schneider.
When a fire destroyed the Gallé studios in 1918, the Schneiders offered space to a group of the company’s artists so they could continue production. In return, they taught Charles marqueterie de verre. Similar to wood marquetry, this process involves cutting sections out of a glass surface and filling them with pieces of a contrasting color. In 1921, Schneider trademarked his technique for making cameo glass lamps and vases — exemplified in this piece from the early 1920s — which he signed “Le Verre Français” or “Charder,” the latter perhaps a portmanteau combining his first and last names. These works were popular and sold well at France’s top department stores, including Galeries Lafayette and Le Bon Marché. More elaborate, one-of-a-kind pieces from the studio were signed “Schneider” and offered at Paris art galleries like Au Vase Etrusque and Delvaux.
The Schneiders participated in the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Moderne in Paris, at which Charles was a member of the jury. The company was at its peak, expanding both its design repertoire and the number of workers, to 500. During this period, it began moving away from the organic shapes of Art Nouveau to the more geometric designs of Art Deco, with some pieces embodying a kind of transitional style, such as this chandelier. Charles also began experimenting with pigmented powders, fine crushed glass mixed with metal oxides, which yielded brilliant, iridescent colors when applied to a glass surface.
A large portion of the factory’s art glass production was sold in the United States. When the U.S. stock market crashed in 1929, demand was all but obliterated, and the company struggled to stay afloat throughout the 1930s. Ernest died in 1937, and during World War II, the factory was seized by German troops and used as a canteen. In 1950, Charles and his son set up a new factory called Cristalleries Schneider in Epinay-sur-Seine, which for several years produced free-blown glass vases, small sculptures and lighting fixtures to some acclaim. Charles Schneider died in 1952, and the factory eventually closed in 1981.
- 1930s Slender Art Deco Topaz Glass Vase, Signed by SchneiderBy Charles SchneiderLocated in New York, NYThis beautiful, slender and museum quality French Art Deco "Cubist style" glass vase by Schneider is decorated with an "acid etched" slanted rectangular pattern on top and bands of a...Category
Vintage 1930s French Art Deco Vases
MaterialsGlass, Art Glass
- 1930s Art Deco Topaz Cubist Style Glass Vase, Signed by SchneiderBy Charles SchneiderLocated in New York, NYThis beautiful topaz colored, and museum quality French Art Deco "Cubist style" glass vase by Schneider is decorated with an "acid etched" geometric pattern with vertical etched line...Category
Vintage 1930s French Art Deco Glass
MaterialsArt Glass
- Museum Quality French Art Deco Topaz Craqueleur Glass Vase, Signed by SchneiderBy Charles SchneiderLocated in New York, NYThis stunning Art Deco vase (signed Schneider) was realized in the studio of the esteemed glass makers Ernest and Charles Schneider circa 1925. The Schneider Brothers were some of th...Category
Vintage 1920s French Art Deco Vases
MaterialsGlass
- 1930s Art Deco Tall "Acid Etched" Cubist Style Glass Vase, Signed by SchneiderBy Charles SchneiderLocated in New York, NYThis stunning ombre topaz, museum quality French Art Deco "Cubist style" glass vase by Schneider was realized circa 1930.. This piece employs the highly sought after "Acid Etched" te...Category
Vintage 1930s French Art Deco Glass
MaterialsArt Glass, Blown Glass
- Art Deco Mottled Carnelian Glass Bowl w/ Wrought Iron Base Signed by SchneiderLocated in New York, NYThis sophisticated Art Deco bowl was realized and signed by Charles Schneider in France circa 1920. It features a mottled carnelian glass top with a wrought iron base adorned with ru...Category
Vintage 1920s French Art Deco Centerpieces
MaterialsWrought Iron
- Art Deco Amphora Vase in Handblown Lilac & Channeled Clear Glass Signed DaumBy DaumLocated in New York, NYThis refined Art Deco amphora vase was realized and signed Nancy Daum in France circa 1925. It features an undulating body flanked on its neck by two ...Category
Vintage 1920s French Art Deco Vases
MaterialsArt Glass
- Daum and Majorelle Art Deco Glass Bowl in Wrought Iron FrameBy DaumLocated in Gainesville, FLDaum and Majorelle glass bowl blown into a wrought iron frame. The glass is bright orange with gold foil inclusions. The bowl is engraved on the bottom with the makers' signatures.Category
Early 20th Century French Art Deco Glass
MaterialsWrought Iron
- Daum & Louis Majorelle Early Wrought Iron Mounted Orange Glass Bowl, circa 1910By DaumLocated in Bishop's Stortford, HertfordshireAn exceptional, large and early French Daum art glass bowl in a mottled orange coloring with wisps of blue encased in wrought iron by Louis Majorel...Category
Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Planters, Cachepots and Jardinières
MaterialsWrought Iron
- Daum Art Deco Acid-Etched Glass Vase, circa 1930By DaumLocated in Saint-Ouen, FRA Daum Nançy Art Deco acid-etched deep green glass vase, circa 1930 Rare and important vase «aux biches» in thick glass tinted green with decoration in relief with acid Signed «Dau...Category
Vintage 1920s French Art Deco Glass
MaterialsArt Glass
$14,576 Sale Price20% Off - A Daum Art Deco Acid-Etched Glass Vase, circa 1930By DaumLocated in Saint-Ouen, FR"Parrots" A Daum Nançy France Art Deco Acid-etched Glass Vase, circa 1930 Large Cameo and overlaid glass vase, decorated with parrots. Etched to foot rim DAUM NANCY FRANCE with Cross...Category
Vintage 1920s French Art Deco Glass
MaterialsArt Glass
- Daum Nancy French Art Deco Acid Etched Green Art Glass VaseBy DaumLocated in Hamilton, OntarioThis antique acid etched art glass vase was done by the renowned French maker Daum & Nancy and made in circa 1925 in the period Art Deco style. The vase h...Category
Early 20th Century French Art Deco Glass
MaterialsArt Glass
- Charles Schneider, Art Deco Glass Vase, France, C. 1930By Charles SchneiderLocated in New York, NYArt Deco acid-etched smoked glass vase by Charles Schneider. Signed "Schneider, France". Daum was founded in Nancy, France, by Jean Daum in 1878. After his death in 1885, his sons ...Category
Early 20th Century French Art Deco Glass
MaterialsGlass