
The Art of GlassToledo Museum of Art
Published by GILES in association with the Toledo Museum of Art
Publish Date — July 2006 (UK and USA)
Dimensions — 248 pages, 254 x 229mm (9 x 10 in.), portrait
Illustrations — 200 colour illustrations
Hardback price — UK£35.00/US$60.00
ISBN — 1-904832-23-7
ISBN — 978-1-904832-23-2
Book Details (pdf) — Glass_ai.pdf
Trade Orders — Please visit our Trade Orders section
Sales Points
A major new survey, highly illustrated with more than 100 full-page colour plates of key masterpieces from the Museum’s internationally renowned collection of ancient, Islamic, European, American and contemporary studio glass
Published to accompany the opening of the important new Glass Pavilion, which houses the Toledo Museum of Art’s collection of glass and glass-working studios
Each work of art is accompanied by an extended commentary written by a leading scholar
Includes many additional comparative and/or supplementary colour images, including works of art from the Toledo Museum’s collections in other media, artists’ sketches, and magnificent details
About the Book
This brand new book introduces both specialists and generalists alike to the remarkable world of glass manufacture and design from the Ancient World to the present day, as presented in one of the world’s great collections of glass.
Published on the occasion of the opening of the new Glass Pavilion at the Toledo Museum of Art, designed by Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa, lead architects of SANAA Ltd., Tokyo, in 2006, this book draws on the superb quality of the collections at Toledo. The Museum has consciously collected the best examples of the glassmaker’s art across all ages. Today the Museum is internationally renowned for the quality and scope of its glass collection.
The Museum has trail-blazed new areas of glass collecting. Thanks to its founder, glass industrialist Edward D. Libbey, the Museum has collected art in glass for more than a century. The Museum was also the birthplace of the Studio Glass Movement in the 1960s. The opening of the Glass Pavilion will further enhance the Museum’s leading position in this field of art – it will offer visitors the matchless experience of being able to see a broad range of historic glass next to studios where glass artists are creating works. In this way the Museum and this publication will provide a unique insight into the design and working of glass through the ages, all within the context of a purpose built art museum space.
This volume presents more than 100 major examples of the glassmaker’s art from ancient times to the present, accompanied by discursive texts written by leading writers. The combination of these thought-provoking entries and the wealth of illustration makes this title a must for specialist collectors and generalists alike.
