Lot

763

Paar Koppchen mit Untertassen aus Rubinglas

In Modernes Kunstgewerbe / Sammlung Dreßen / Kuns...

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A pair of ruby glass tea bowls and saucers
Tapering bowls on rounded saucers with foliate cut decor. H tea bowls 4.3 and 4.5, D saucers 12 and 10.4 cm.
Central or Southern Germany, late 17th C.

The earliest ruby glass was produced by Johann Kunckel in Potsdam in 1683. However, in his publications on chemistry, Kunckel refers to a doctor in Lübeck named Andreas Cassius who was supposedly the first to make glass in a "beautiful ruby colour". Kunckel regarded his contribution to be in the improvement of the transparency of the glass, which he achieved through "great costs and experiments".
Several years after Kunckel, the manager of the Munich glassworks, Hans Christoph Fidler, also succeeded in producing ruby glass. It is not known if or where the production of this glass took place, but it is understood that Fidler acquired the knowledge of how to produce it in the glassworks of the Duke of Saxony-Lauenburg.

Literature
Cf. v. Kerssenbrock-Krosigk, Rubinglas des ausgehenden 17. und des 18. Jahrhunderts, Mainz 2001, no. 383, a slightly taller pair of tea bowls in the Grünes Gewölbe in Dresden (inv. no. IV 222 and 223).





Paar Koppchen mit Untertassen aus Rubinglas
Rotes, leicht schlieriges Glas mit Schliff und Schnitt. Konische Gefäße mit wenig hochgestochenem Abriss. Die Teller gemuldet, Standfläche mit Abriss blütenförmig beschliffen und geschnitten. Koppchen H 4,3 und 4,5, UT D 1,2 und 10,4 cm.
Mittel- oder Süddeutschland, Ende 17. Jh.

Das früheste Rubinglas wurde ab 1683 von Johann Kunckel in Potsdam hergestellt. In seinen chemischen Publikationen verweist Kunckel auf einen Lübecker Arzt, einen gewissen Andreas Cassius, der Glas in "schönster Rubin-Couleur" als Erster erfunden hat. Seinen eigenen Beitrag sieht Kunckel in der Veredlung des Glases im Hinblick auf die Durchsichtigkeit, was mit "vielen Unkosten und Experimenta" verbunden war.
Wenige Jahre nach Kunckel, nämlich 1690, gelang die Herstellung von Rubinglas auch dem Betreiber der Münchner Glashütte, Hans Christoph Fidler. Ob und wo die Produktion stattgefunden hat, ist nicht eindeutig geklärt, seine Kenntnisse scheint Fidler sich jedenfalls in den Glashütten des Herzogs von Sachsen-Lauenburg angeeignet zu haben.

Literatur
Vgl. v. Kerssenbrock-Krosigk, Rubinglas des ausgehenden 17. und des 18. Jahrhunderts, Mainz 2001, Nr. 383, ein etwas höheres Paar Koppchen aus der Sammlung Grünes Gewölbe Dresden (Inv.Nr. IV 222 und 223).





A pair of ruby glass tea bowls and saucers
Tapering bowls on rounded saucers with foliate cut decor. H tea bowls 4.3 and 4.5, D saucers 12 and 10.4 cm.
Central or Southern Germany, late 17th C.

The earliest ruby glass was produced by Johann Kunckel in Potsdam in 1683. However, in his publications on chemistry, Kunckel refers to a doctor in Lübeck named Andreas Cassius who was supposedly the first to make glass in a "beautiful ruby colour". Kunckel regarded his contribution to be in the improvement of the transparency of the glass, which he achieved through "great costs and experiments".
Several years after Kunckel, the manager of the Munich glassworks, Hans Christoph Fidler, also succeeded in producing ruby glass. It is not known if or where the production of this glass took place, but it is understood that Fidler acquired the knowledge of how to produce it in the glassworks of the Duke of Saxony-Lauenburg.

Literature
Cf. v. Kerssenbrock-Krosigk, Rubinglas des ausgehenden 17. und des 18. Jahrhunderts, Mainz 2001, no. 383, a slightly taller pair of tea bowls in the Grünes Gewölbe in Dresden (inv. no. IV 222 and 223).





Paar Koppchen mit Untertassen aus Rubinglas
Rotes, leicht schlieriges Glas mit Schliff und Schnitt. Konische Gefäße mit wenig hochgestochenem Abriss. Die Teller gemuldet, Standfläche mit Abriss blütenförmig beschliffen und geschnitten. Koppchen H 4,3 und 4,5, UT D 1,2 und 10,4 cm.
Mittel- oder Süddeutschland, Ende 17. Jh.

Das früheste Rubinglas wurde ab 1683 von Johann Kunckel in Potsdam hergestellt. In seinen chemischen Publikationen verweist Kunckel auf einen Lübecker Arzt, einen gewissen Andreas Cassius, der Glas in "schönster Rubin-Couleur" als Erster erfunden hat. Seinen eigenen Beitrag sieht Kunckel in der Veredlung des Glases im Hinblick auf die Durchsichtigkeit, was mit "vielen Unkosten und Experimenta" verbunden war.
Wenige Jahre nach Kunckel, nämlich 1690, gelang die Herstellung von Rubinglas auch dem Betreiber der Münchner Glashütte, Hans Christoph Fidler. Ob und wo die Produktion stattgefunden hat, ist nicht eindeutig geklärt, seine Kenntnisse scheint Fidler sich jedenfalls in den Glashütten des Herzogs von Sachsen-Lauenburg angeeignet zu haben.

Literatur
Vgl. v. Kerssenbrock-Krosigk, Rubinglas des ausgehenden 17. und des 18. Jahrhunderts, Mainz 2001, Nr. 383, ein etwas höheres Paar Koppchen aus der Sammlung Grünes Gewölbe Dresden (Inv.Nr. IV 222 und 223).




Modernes Kunstgewerbe / Sammlung Dreßen / Kunstgewerbe / Abraham & David Roentgen

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Henrik Hanstein, sworn public auctioneer
Takuro Ito, Kilian Jay von Seldeneck, auctioneers

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