Baccarat
A Magnificent Pair of Crystal Glass and Gilt Bronze Medici Vases
POA
A Magnificent Pair of Crystal Glass and Gilt Bronze Medici Vases by La Compagnie des Cristalleries de Baccarat. The body of Campana form and moulded...
Dimensions
Height: 80 cm (32 in)Width: 33 cm (13 in)
Depth: 33 cm (13 in)
Description
A Magnificent Pair of Crystal Glass and Gilt Bronze Medici Vases
by La Compagnie des Cristalleries de Baccarat.
The body of Campana form and moulded with vitruvian scrolls. Each vase has two gilt bronze scroll handles cast with masks on either side of the body. The trumpet gilt bronze hoof is cast with foliage and anthemia, and leads to a diamond cut crystal cylindrical stand. The elaborate gilt bronze base is decorated with foliate scrolls, anthemia and claw feet.
France, Circa 1900.
So called in reference to first century Roman vase owned by the Medici family and now displated as the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Baccarat exhibited their ‘Medici vases’ of different sizes in Nancy in 1909 at the Exposition international de l’Est de la France.

The Baccarat stand at the Exposition Internationale de l’Est de la France, Nancy, 1909.
The Managing Director of Baccarat, Adrien Michaut, was also Chairman of the jury at the Nancy exhibition, and therefore no prize in the category of glass could be awarded to Baccarat. However, the administrative division awarded Baccarat a special prize for their outstanding display. The report read “We are stunned by the matchless mastery which went in to shaping and decorating the crystal”.
One of the Medici Vases from the Nancy Exhibition is illustrated in Jean-Louis Curtiss’, ‘Baccarat’, Thames and Hudson 1992, page 81.

One of the Medici Vases from the Nancy Exhibition, illustrated in Jean-Louis Curtiss’, ‘Baccarat’, Thames and Hudson 1992, page 81.

Designs for a Medici Vase. Nancy, Exposition internationale de l’Est de la France, 1909, Baccarat Archives
Medici vases measuring 108 cm and 51 cm high, belonging the Baccarat collection patrimoniale, were shown at the ‘Baccarat : La LĂ©gende du Cristal’, Exhibition Catalogue at the Petit Palais in 2014/15.
Date
Circa 1900
Origin
France
Medium
Cut-Crystal & Gilt-Bronze
Baccarat is the world’s leading manufacturer of crystalware. Founded in 1764 under the patronage of Louis XV as Renault et Compagnie, the firm became known as the Compagnie des Cristalleries de Baccarat during the nineteenth Century.
The company began to flourish at the beginning of the Nineteenth Century, as the effects of the Napoleonic Wars abated, and its reputation was consolidated by the official approval from various sovereigns and heads of state. At the 1823 Exposition Nationale in Paris, it was Baccarat’s crystalware that Louis XVIII was said to have particularly admired, appreciating its ‘beautiful workmanship’.
It was Charles X’s visit to the crystalworks in 1828 however that had the most significant repercussions for the company. Baccarat presented the monarch with a gift of two magnificent Medici Vases, a large crystal Ewer, a fifteen piece Tea Service and a five-piece Water Set. The king then ordered a dinner service for the Tuileries, while the Duchess d’AngoulĂŞme personally chose a set of eighteen glasses, described by her as ‘..sturdy, balanced, perfect’. Later Louis-Philippe and NapolĂ©on III also visited the crystalworks and were followed by a succession of French presidents and foreign heads of state.
François-Eugène de Fontenay (who joined the company in 1841) discovered that by the addition of the nickel oxide in the manufacturing process, a perfectly clear product, ‘crystal glass’, free of discolouration and imitating precious rock crystal was produced. This is just one of many technical innovations and improvements discovered by Baccarat, that make it the company it is today.
The Baccarat company was awarded a Gold medal at the French Exposition des Produits de l’Industrie in 1855 and has continued to carry off the top prizes ever since. In 1867 they exhibited a gigantic fountain twenty four feet tall, with a basin ten feet in diameter, which it was said ‘simply took visitors breath away’.
With the continuing improvement in their manufacturing standards, the quality of Baccarat’s ‘crystal glass’ improved and reached the highest level by the end of the century, competing successfully with the Bohemian glass industry. Baccarat ‘crystal glass’ is highly regarded, not only for its unusual clarity, but also for its great solidity and weight.
Bibliography:
‘La Compagnie des Cristalleries de Baccarat, Tarif des Articles d’Eclairage’, (Paris), Edition 1903-4.
Curtis, Jean-Louis. Baccarat, Thames and Hudson, (London), 1992.
Meyer, Jonathan. Great Exhibitions: London, New York, Paris, Philadelphia, 1851-1900, Antique Collector’s Club, (Woodbridge, UK), 2006; p.263.
Formerly the property of the ‘Archives de la Manufacture de Baccarat’.
Jean-Louis Curtiss, ‘Baccarat’, Thames and Hudson, 1992, p. 81 (illustrated).
D Battie and S Cottle, ‘Encyclopedia of glass’, Conran octopus, 1997.
‘Baccarat : La LĂ©gende du Cristal’, Exhibition Catalogue, Petit Palais, musĂ©e des Beaux-Arts de la Ville de Paris, 15 October 2014 to 4 January 2015, p. 87 (for a discussion of the model).













Print

