November 27, 2025
UK Art

‘Gems of enflamed transparencies, of bottomless blues, of congealed opals’: Why glass was perfect for the elemental experimentalism of Art Nouveau


‘Vases coloured like an autumn sky’ caught the eye of the Italian correspondent of The Architectural Record at the Paris Exposition of 1900. They were the work of American designer Louis Comfort Tiffany and the Italian reporter was not their only admirer: another critic celebrated their ‘almost supernatural light’, which he called ‘as roseate as a sunset’.

Glass vases produced by Tiffany’s French contemporary Émile Gallé were equally commended, in the Journal of Glass Studies, as ‘gems of enflamed transparencies, of bottomless blues, of congealed opals’. Iridescent, crackled and flashed, glass produced by luminaries of the Art Nouveau movement, resembling the shimmering interiors of seashells or the soft translucency of Roman unguentaria, inspired by Byzantine mosaics and medieval enamels, by shards of quartz and agate, has a glister, glamour and, in some instances, intensity of otherworldly colouring uniquely its own.

Exoticism and decadent modernity were hallmarks of the movement. The ‘new art’ style — named after the interiors emporium Maison de l’Art Nouveau, opened in 1895 at 22, rue de Provence in Paris, France, by art dealer Siegfried Bing — spread across Europe and the USA between the 1890s and the outbreak of the First World War. Characterised by exaggerated organic forms, sinuous, molten lines and asymmetry, in a rejection of the often cumbersome historicism that dominated much of the 19th century, it reshaped furniture, architecture, fabric and wallpaper patterns, metalware and — famously, through the work of Alphonse Mucha and his imitators — graphic and commercial design. Nature would determine the luscious colours, form and surface decoration of much Art Nouveau glass; it also left its imprint on the shape and pattern of everything from wrought-iron balconies to tiaras.

Abstract form: a Johann Lötz Witwe rosewater vessel

Abstract form: a Johann Lötz Witwe rosewater vessel.

(Image credit: Alamy)

Makers looked to plants and flowers, to swirling tendrils and falling petals, hedgerow greens and the colours of blossom, irises and rusty chrysanthemums, peacock feathers and carved cameo shells and, in the case of crystal studio founders the Daum brothers, to entire landscapes of trees. In Britain, exponents of the new style were influenced by motifs drawn from Celtic art and Japanese print-making.



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