Stueben
Steuben Glass Works "Verre de Soie" Trumpet / Waisted Vase, Corning, New York — circa 1903–1930
Steuben Glass Works "Verre de Soie" Trumpet / Waisted Vase, Corning, New York — circa 1903–1930
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An elegant and classic example of early Steuben Glass Works art glass, this tall waisted vase exemplifies the pure, restrained beauty that made Frederick Carder's Verre de Soie ("Glass of Silk") one of the most admired art glass finishes of the early 20th century.
The form is one of Steuben's most refined — a gracefully concave waist rises from a rounded bulbous foot through a gently narrowing stem before flowering outward into a broad, elegantly flared trumpet mouth. The silhouette is clean, confident, and timeless, allowing the extraordinary quality of the glass itself to take center stage. The smooth, unadorned surface is entirely without applied decoration or engraving, presenting an uninterrupted canvas of shimmering, luminous iridescence — the hallmark of Carder's celebrated Verre de Soie technique.
Across the full height of this piece, the glass shifts and glows with a pearlescent, soap-bubble iridescence — moving from soft silvery white and pale lavender at the waist to deeper blue, gold, and pink at the shoulder and mouth as the light plays across its surface. The frosted, silky quality of the glass, achieved by treating the warm glass with stannous chloride during production, lends the piece a luminosity that seems to glow from within.
The undecorated trumpet form in this larger size is among the most sought-after of all Steuben Verre de Soie shapes — its simplicity and scale allowing the iridescent surface to achieve maximum visual impact.
Height: 9¾ inches Condition: Very good antique condition consistent with age. Strong, vivid iridescence throughout. No chips or cracks noted.
A superb and gallery-worthy piece of early American art glass — a testament to Frederick Carder's genius and the extraordinary legacy of the Steuben Glass Works.
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