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Wineglass Meteor Koloman Moser Meyr’s Neffe ca.1900

SKU 256

Green wine glass, tulip-shaped, decor Meteor, Koloman Moser, Meyr’s Neffe for Bakalowits Vienna, ca. 1900

  • Height: 22cm, Depth: 8cm
  • 1900 to 1905
    Epoch: Art Nouveau
    Technique: Glass, coloured, optically blown
    Bib.: comp. Leopold Museum (ed.), Koloman Moser 1868-1918, exhibition catalogue, Prestel 2007, p. 124; University of Applied Arts Vienna (ed.), Koloman Moser, Vienna 1979, p. 36
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    SKU 256
    Description

    Koloman Moser was one of the most important designers of the Wiener Jugendstil. He was a co-founder of the Viennese Secession and later of the Wiener Werkstätte. His designs for several traditional Viennese companies are among the most valuable objects on the art market and achieve high prices.

    This glass was commissioned by E.Bakalowits Söhne and manufactured by Meyr’s Neffe, one of the most important Bohemian glassworks around 1900, which supplied many Viennese companies.

    Koloman Moser designed various glass tableware sets around 1900, the most popular being the “Meteor” set. This glass is part of the “Meteor” set.

    Artist

    As a jack-of-all-trades, Koloman Moser shaped the Viennese art scene around 1900 like hardly any other artist of his generation. Initially active as an illustrator and graphic designer, the versatile artist subsequently provided numerous designs for furniture, metal objects, fabrics, glass, etc. and was also artistically active as a painter. After studying at the Academy of Fine Arts and the Vienna School of Arts and Crafts, Moser became a founding member of the Vienna Secession in 1897. He designed the club magazine of this progressive artists' association and was responsible for its corporate design (catalogs, exhibition design). Together with Josef Hoffmann and Fritz Waerndorfer, Koloman Moser founded the Wiener Werkstatte in 1903. Until his resignation in 1907, he and Hoffmann were the artistic directors. They propagated the penetration of all areas of life with artistically designed arts and crafts in the sense of the Gesamtkunstwerk (total work of art). With numerous designs for the Wiener Werkstätte, he contributed significantly to the valorization of contemporary-modern arts and crafts in Vienna around 1900. From 1900 on, Moser taught graphic design at the Vienna School of Arts and Crafts and influenced and promoted a whole generation of artists and designers. Designs from the Koloman Moser School were executed by renowned manufactories, such as Backhausen, Bakalowits, Loetz, Portois & Fix, J. & J. Kohn, etc. In 1905, Moser resigned from the Secession together with the Klimt group and in 1908 took a prominent part in the widely acclaimed Kunstschau (art show) organized by the group in Vienna. In the years 1908 until his death in 1918, the focus of his artistic activity was on painting. Stylistically, the paintings of Ferdinand Hodler exerted a great influence on him. Although not celebrated as a painter during his lifetime, Nowadays, Moser's intensely colored, symbolist paintings are in great demand on the art market . Today, works by Koloman Moser can be found in the collections of important museums, such as the MAK and Leopold Museum in Vienna, or in international private collections, such as the Neue Galerie New York.

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    Wineglass Meteor Koloman Moser Meyr’s Neffe ca.1900

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