Fratelli Toso Murano: 1902-1980

Hardback

Main Details

Title Fratelli Toso Murano: 1902-1980
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Marc Heiremans
By (author) Caterina Toso
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:432
Dimensions(mm): Height 300,Width 235
Category/GenreArt and design styles - from c 1900 to now
Ceramic arts, pottery, glass
Individual designers
ISBN/Barcode 9783897905061
ClassificationsDewey:748.2094531
Audience
General
Illustrations 2680 colour

Publishing Details

Publisher Arnoldsche
Imprint Arnoldsche
Publication Date 1 November 2017
Publication Country Germany

Description

A creative exchange with artists such as the painter Guido Cadorin or the ceramicist and sculptor Hans Stoltenberg-Lerche brought the second generation Toso Brothers to the forefront of Murano glass manufactories at the beginning of the twentieth century. After the Second World War Ermanno Toso and Pollio Perelda were among the most famous designers and continued the production of lavish series in glass, complemented from the 1950s onwards with high-quality one-offs executed mainly in the celebrated millefiori technique. This decoration consists of a multitude of tiny coloured discs, known as murrini, which are produced by melting, cooling and cutting bundled canes of glass to form a cross-section pattern. Together with Caterina Toso, renowned Murano expert Marc Heiremans looks back on and reviews the complex history of the famous glass manufactory. Well-informed texts, hitherto unpublished sketches and archive photos make Fratelli Toso Murano an essential reference work for all connoisseurs of glass.

Author Biography

Marc Heiremans is an expert on Murano glass and supervises the set-up of diverse important collections across Europe and North America. He is a member of the Royal Chamber of Antiquarians of Belgium and of the Belgium Chamber of Art Experts. Heiremans is also author of the Arnoldsche publications 20th Century Murano Glass (1996), Dino Martens: Muranese Glass Designer (1999), Seguso Vetri D Arte: Glass Objects from Murano (1932-1973) (2014) and Vetreria Aureliano Toso (2016).