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Emile Galle Origin & History
The famous
French glass artist Emile Galle was born in
Nancy, France in 1846 into a rapidly
industrializing world with major scientific
advances. His father Charles Galle owned a
ceramics and glassmaking factory, and in his
early years Emile was exposed academically
to botany, art, entomology, and chemistry,
disciplines which were to serve him well in
his later artistic career. In his teens,
Galle traveled widely and even fought in the
war between France and Prussia, and in
London he was fascinated by the enameling
techniques seen in the oriental collection
of the Victoria & Albert Museum.
Galle began
working for the Burgun, Schverer glass
company in Meisenthal before establishing
his own company in 1873. While he found
experimenting with classical and enameled
designs interesting, his aspirations were
dramatically expanded when seeing the
International Exhibition in Paris in 1878.
There, he was exposed in particular to the
cameo glass of Joseph Locke and John
Northwood from England and Eugene Rousseau
in pate de verre. Galle was about to combine
his love of nature, his chemical training,
and his artistic eye to the worlds of cameo
glass, caramics, marquetry, and beyond.
Galle opened
a small woodworkers shop in 1885 where he
began experimenting in marquetry designs in
furniture, and he continued working at his
father's factory. In 1889, Emile Galle
displayed his new glass creations at the
Paris International Exhibition, designs and
colors not previously seen and causing an
immediate sensation.
The
new style of
Art Nouveau
had begun to appear, and Art Nouveau
aesthetics and love of nature appealed
naturally to the still young Emile Galle.
Burgun, Schverer produced Galle's designs
when he first established his studio, but in
1894 Galle built his own manufacturing plant
in Nancy and began creating his own designs
from inception through production. Galle
personally created many of the designs, and
he was known to actively make alterations
and approve the designs of his talented team
of designers and craftsmen he employed at
the "Cristallerie D'Emile Galle."
As a
botanist, his designs are inspired by
nature, like insects, flowers, dragonflies,
and the concentration of dew on leaves.
Galle won many awards throughout his life
including the French Legion of Honor, and he
enjoyed great popularity and lucrative
commissions throughout. He produced both
complex, intricate glass designs that took
days of painstaking effort to create as well
as high quality art glass which was no less
beautiful but was less expensive to produce.
Galle's work, cameo glass in particular, has
always been widely copied even during Emile
Galle's lifetime. His style influenced many
of his contemporaries including Daum, Muller
Freres, and Le Verre Francais, who became
collectively known as the "School of Nancy"
and of which Galle was elected the first
President.
Galle died in
1904 from leukemia at the age of 58, and his
widow continued to make Galle glass designs
in the factory until the advent of World War
I in 1914 and still using his signature on
the pieces but adding a star after the
"Galle" following his death. After World War
I, Paul Perdrizet, Emile's son-in-law, began
producing Galle glass once again, even
adding new designs and primarily making the
multi-layer cameo glass in floral and
landscape designs. Galle cameo glass was
both wheel cut and acid eteched, both
techniques which required fine craftsmanship
to produce and in which layers of
multi-colored glass is progressively removed
to create the designs. All Galle production
ceased in 1936 although reproductions and
fakes are still made in great quantities to
fool the uninformed. |