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We talk to ‘Antiques Roadshow’ expert Chris Yeo about collecting Mid-Century glass. He says ‘dancing with light and alive with colour, Mid-Century glass makes a bold statement, just try not to get too hooked’.

Glass Act

When I tell people I work in antiques the question I’m invariably asked (after “When do you hope to get a real job?”) is “What do you collect?” and my answer is absolutely nothing. Although I’ve lived, eaten and breathed antiques since childhood the idea of amassing a collection of any one thing or group of things has never held any appeal. With one exception, that is. 

Roughly twenty years ago, on a typical Saturday morning mooch around an antiques market (remember them?), I came across something that stopped me in my tracks. It was a glass vase, a sleek, weighty number in rich shades of blue and turquoise. It was love at first sight and, of course, I bought it. About a month later I bought another piece of glass, shortly followed by another and another – you get the picture. 

For the next few years, I hoovered up every piece of studio glass I could find. It was a labour of love and an obsession which bordered on an addiction. Put a piece of studio glass in front of me and I would find it near impossible to ‘just say no’. I won’t be too hard on my younger self.  There is, after all, something undeniably seductive about mid-century art glass: a perfect marriage of art, craft and design that melts the hearts of even the most ardent minimalists. Richly coloured and beautifully made, fine quality glass introduces just the right note of luxury, colour and sophistication into any interior.

The history of colourful glass

The Europe that emerged from the Second World War was a grey and dismal place. War-time shortages and rationing of “luxury goods” meant that people had been starved of colour for years. There was a huge demand for anything bright, fresh and modern, especially among young people setting up home for the first time.  Ceramics, textiles and wallpaper manufacturers all ramped up the colour quota but nowhere was this appetite for colour better nourished than amongst makers of studio glass. And, when it came to glass, no one understood colour better than the Italians.

Italian design came of age in the post-war years with a welter of colourful designs in both glass and plastic, materials which share the same malleable qualities. The magical process of transforming a bubble of molten glass into a vessel or piece of sculpture is a test of skill and artistry but the Italians took up the challenge with gusto and, of course, style. Highly individualistic designers celebrated colour for its own sake, applying it in ever more bold and dramatic combinations. Italian glass is more properly Venetian glass. Venice has always been the heart of the Italian glassmaking industry with a history of glass-blowing unparalleled anywhere else in the world. From the thirteenth century onwards Venice had held a monopoly on glassmaking in Europe, and its products—often extravagantly coloured, enamelled, and gilded—were treasured luxuries. Originally, Venetian glass was made - as you would imagine - in Venice, but the workshops were moved to the small lagoon island of Murano in 1291, in part because their kilns constituted a fire hazard to the city, but also to keep the glassmaking process a secret by isolating the makers on their own well-guarded island.

Now, I think it’s fair to say that for many of us our idea of Murano glass will have been “coloured” by a trip to Venice. You’ll have done the circuit of St Marks, paid through the nose for a coffee and then, along with ten thousand others, you will have been funnelled off into the narrow alleyways that lead off the square. You shuffle along passed shop after shop – each one dedicated to relieving you of as much money as possible - crammed with all manner of gaudy clowns, fish, dolphins and more Mickey Mouse figures than even Disneyland would want - all sold under the banner “Murano”. If this has been your only encounter with Italian glass you’d be forgiven for wanting it to stay that way but there really is so much more to Murano.

Examples of Murano glass

Murano Glass

From the 13th to the 18th century Murano glass was one of the wonders of the world with an unrivalled reputation for innovation, its glassmakers having developed, among other things, ways of incorporating threads of gold into their creations and techniques for the famous millefiori (multicoloured) and lattimo (milk) glass.  Amongst the myriad workshops that make up the Murano glass industry the most highly regarded and arguably the best known is Venini

The firm was founded in the early 1920s when an enterprising Milanese lawyer, Paolo Venini, established a new glass company on the island with a Venetian antiques dealer, Giacomo Cappelin.  Their breakthrough innovation was to copy the French fashion industry’s tradition of appointing an artistic director to create new designs and then drive them forwards. This was a stroke of genius which instantly put Venini at the forefront of fashion.  The firm collaborated with artists who transferred their skills from canvas to glass, combining bright vibrant colour with flair and confidence that’s the very essence of Italian style. As a strategy, it took glassmaking to new heights of excellence and kick-started the Italian studio glass movement. 

By the early 1930s, Venini was attracting the cream of Italian designers including Carlo Scarpa, Gio Ponti and Tyra Lundgren. The post-war years were Murano’s most dazzling and creative period. With its bold palette, Italian glass of the 1950s and ‘60s is instantly recognisable. Shapes have an easy asymmetry and a looseness of form reminiscent of folded fabric. In fact, one of the most popular shapes was the ‘fazaletto’ or ‘folded-handkerchief’ vases first made by Venini in the 1940s.

'Folded-handkerchief' by Venini

Glass around the world

With its vibrant colour combinations and top-quality design credentials, the Italians dominated the glass scene but they weren’t the only nation on the colour spectrum. In the UK the prestigious London-based firm of Whitefriars had been making glass since the 17th century and had a centuries-old reputation for restrained and elegant glassware but in the 1950s its fortunes changed when, like Venini, it engaged the services of an artistic director, Geoffrey Baxter (1912-95). 

Baxter was a young graduate fresh from the Royal College of Art, at that time a powerhouse of ideas about art and design. At Whitefriars, Baxter took the forms of Scandinavian glass – thickly-walled, with curving organic shapes and highly sculptural vessels – but, unlike the Nordic versions which used either clear glass or subtle, muted shades – Baxter used bright, rich colours to create something youthful and very British. Colourful things were also coming from behind the Iron Curtain. 

In Czechoslovakia, the glass industry was nationalised in 1948 and continued the centuries-old tradition of glassmaking in the Bohemian region. Bohemian glass had a reputation for excellence and the new Communist government did not deem glass to be an art form that was ideologically threatening, meaning that designers could work largely free of official control. This resulted in the creation of highly innovative modern designs that updated traditional methods of glassmaking and put Czech glass on par with the best that Italy had to offer.

Glass art by Whitefriars

Glass in the modern-day

Following on from its 1950s heyday,  studio glass is once again riding the crest of a wave of popularity. If you’ve never thought of having glass on display, think again: the allure of light playing on coloured glass can be just as compelling as a strikingly painted canvas. That said, some people remain a little nervous about living with glass – “It’ll get knocked over and smashed!” Truth is, most glass is more robust than you think and, so long as you’re not flinging it against the wall, it’s no less durable than pottery.  

Striking forms and colours make the piece a work of art in its own right and a real talking point. Art glass, displayed as a single statement piece or grouped together, brings warmth and colour to an interior as effectively as any painting and can also be a good way of introducing an accent colour into a room scheme. 

The sinuous, organic shapes and jewel-like hues so beloved of mid-century glass artists work as a counterpoint to the tailored interiors of today. Arranging collections of glass in groupings of similar colours and shapes create a strong visual impact. 

Remember, when it comes to glass, less is always more, don’t clutter shelves and tabletops with pieces. Instead, give each one space to breathe. You’ll find your art glass a source of inspiration as well as beauty.

Browse our collection of Mid-Century glass:

> Shop our Murano glass collection

> Shop glass and ceramics

 

With its tall back and enclosing wings, the wingback armchair is a distinctive classic. It has established itself in the upholstered furniture lexicon with its offer of elegance and comfort. Whilst wingback armchairs now represent a timelessly stylish piece of furniture, their origins are very practical.

The ultimate fireside companion

French 19th Century wingback armchair in a deconstructed condition, ready for reupholstery.

Today, with our central heating and carpets, it is difficult to fathom quite how cold the old English home once was. 'Wings' were added to seating to protect the sitter from blustery draughts, as well as from stray embers and ashes that might spit out of the roaring fire.

The wingback still offers this protection, but there is clearly less need in today’s home. So why are these chairs still so prevalent in our interiors? Their stately yet enveloping form has made them a true stalwart of classic English furniture.

How did wingback armchairs emerge?

Simple beginnings

The first record of any sort of wingback chair was made in the 17th Century. At this time, its purpose was likely wholly utilitarian and these chairs were used for the aforementioned reasons. It was probably entirely wooden, perhaps with an added seat cushion for comfort. Indeed, the wingback armchair shares its wings, or ‘saddle cheeks,’ with the settle. Both variations were orientated around warmth and, of course, having a place to rest.

Italian upholstered wingback armchair

The Queen Anne heyday

During the Queen Anne years, the wingback evolved to become the classic English armchair we know today. Whilst Queen Anne only reigned from 1702 to 1714, the ‘Queen Anne’ style persevered for much of the first half of the 18th Century. This was the age of walnut and developing upholstery skills, which both elevated the wingback into something quite beautiful. Cabinet-makers combined these wings with the elegant new cabriole leg, with its curved knee and pad foot.

Interiors underwent a great deal of change during this period. As large-scale fireplaces and bigger windows emerged, there was a natural demand for furniture with similar proportions. Cabinet furniture became large and imposing and chairs had more generous proportions. Social change was underway too, and gatherings required plenty of sociable furniture. So, the wingback became the ultimate ‘easy chair’ during the Queen Anne years, and its use extended far beyond protection.

The wingback armchair established

From Queen Anne thereafter, the wingback had firmly earned its place in the English home. Georgian interpretations used walnut and mahogany frames with tall, shaped backs and wings. Wingback armchairs also found their way across the pond to France and elsewhere in Europe. Wings were a natural adornment for French bergères, particularly the curvaceous feminine examples seen under Louis XV.

The early 19th Century brought about an upholstery revolution, which swept the wingback armchair along in its tide. Prolific makers of the period, such as Howard & Sons, produced their own examples of the style popularised by Queen Anne. Comfort became a keen priority in Victorian Britain, and the wingback developed a perfect combination of comfort and aesthetic. By the time the English country house style was truly codified a century or so later, the wingback was already a classic in its own right.

Mid Century modern armchairs

Pair of Czech wingback armchairs, designed by Miroslav Navrátil

The remarkable thing about these chairs is their never-ending appeal. From their primitive beginnings for warding off draughts, wings still appealed to designers of the mid to late 20th Century. Indeed, many modern furniture companies still produce the style. Over the years, wingbacks have sported everything from velvet to leather coverings – depending on current fashions.

At the heart of this enduring appreciation is the organic shapely feel wings give to a chair. Post-war designers across Europe adapted the feature to suit their sleek and functional designs. For instance, in 1957, Ottorino Aloisio designed a wonderful wingback which was manufactured in Pier Luigi Colli’s workshop. This chair appears to have almost nothing in common with a classic Queen Anne wingback; it has a simplistic silhouette with a metal frame and ergonomic feel. And yet, wings are such a distinct feature that wingback armchairs from all walks of life feel related.

Antique wingbacks for the modern home

These chairs are high and mighty, yet also comforting and welcoming. As a result, wingbacks have a place in all interiors. Wings give a chair an automatic sense of structure and presence. Their shape means they look brilliant from any angle, with a particularly striking side profile. Angle one or two beside the fire or incorporate them into a suite for a full English drawing room feel. Wingbacks and Chesterfield sofas share a respected legacy and complement each other wonderfully. Camelback sofas are another great match for these armchairs, due to their common s-curve form.

English 20th Century barrel-backed armchair

All armchairs feel at home in the living room, but a wingback will accentuate any corner of your home. Their cosiness is perfect for a bedroom chair, or to welcome guests in a foyer or hallway. The high back, deep seat and wings of a classic wingback make it a supportive reading chair for the library or home office.

The wingback style has truly stood the test of time. With their charming utilitarian history, these armchairs somehow feel both timeless and contemporary. They will sit proudly within a range of interior schemes and offer an opportunity to combine their classic silhouette with vibrant fabrics of your choice. Pair extravagant colours with a neutral setting, or vice versa place a simple wingback in front of floral wallpaper or brightly painted wall.

Browse our collection of wingback furniture here, and all of our armchairs here.