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Ennion and His Legacy: Mold-Blown Glass from Ancient Rome | Behind the Glass Lecture 

Corning Museum of Glass
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Soft drink bottles, drinking glasses and glass Christmas ornaments are part of daily modern life, but their roots can be traced to the ancient world and the legacy of Ennion, the earliest known name of a Roman glass worker. This lecture by the Museum's president and executive director, ancient glass expert Dr. Karol Wight, explores the mold-blown glass of ancient Rome, starting with the works of Ennion, the first ancient glass artisan to include his name on the glass he made.
The exhibition Ennion and His Legacy: Mold-Blown Glass from Ancient Rome is on view through January 4, 2016 at The Corning Museum of Glass. The exhibition explores some of the earliest known works made by blowing molten glass into molds carved with decorative and figural designs. The revolutionary technique allowed glassmakers to design glass vessels with complex decoration and figural scenes, and paved the way for glass artisans to create numerous examples of the same shape and design.

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26 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 6   
@user-nz4yd3iu4t
@user-nz4yd3iu4t 2 года назад
멋찝니다~~
@flipflopski2951
@flipflopski2951 5 месяцев назад
The knobbed vessels were probably designed to catch the sediment in the beer so you didn't drink it.
@poelgeestglass
@poelgeestglass 9 лет назад
Interesting lecture, thanks. About the technique, it was mentioned by Karol that there were no punty marks. Does this mean they had not invented it yet? Or did they prefer to not use them.
@corningmuseumofglass
@corningmuseumofglass 9 лет назад
***** Sorry for the delay in this response. We passed on your question to Karol Wight and here is what she said: The answer to your question is complicated. We do have punty marks on free-blown glass of the first century but not on mold-blown of the same time period. The glass makers must have preferred not to use a punty for mold-blown and used some other tool (as Mark Taylor does in the new video) to hold the glass while finishing rims and adding handles. A lot of mold-blown vessels are drinking cups whose rims were cracked off, so they didn't need to be puntied. But there are an equal number of perfume flasks with finished rims and handles, so a grabbing or clasping tool was used in their manufacture.
@poelgeestglass
@poelgeestglass 9 лет назад
Thanks for the answer. It is very interesting to read that we cannot fully determine (yet) what type of tool/method they used! regards, Ramon
@adders45
@adders45 6 лет назад
It looks like they used some kind of gadget tool to carry the pieces after the mould - very simple to make in a wooden pole with some looped wire tied on with leather
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