Skip to main content

This auction has ended. View lot details

You may also be interested in

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

Lot 94

A very rare Pietro Bigaglia scrambled millefiori paperweight, dated 1845

29 September 2020, 10:30 BST
London, Knightsbridge

Sold for £765 inc. premium

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

How to sell

Looking for a similar item?

Our British Ceramics specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.

Find your local specialist

Ask about this lot

A very rare Pietro Bigaglia scrambled millefiori paperweight, dated 1845

Of tapered square form with chamfered edges, containing a variety of composite and silhouette canes including the date cane '1845', amidst short lengths of twisted ribbons and latticinio, 5.5cm square, 5.4cm high

Footnotes

The first millefiori paperweights are thought to have been produced around 1843 and Pietro Bigaglia was among the first Venetian craftsmen to make them. The earliest dated examples are from 1845, the year in which Bigaglia exhibited paperweights for the first time at the Exhibition of Austrian Industry in Vienna. These rare weights are of the scrambled millefiori type and usually of traditional spherical form, a type known as the 'Venetian ball', see for example that from the Baroness de Bellet Collection sold by Bonhams on 19 May 2010, lot 63. Cylindrical and square weights are amongst the rarest and earliest examples, with dated specimens being particularly scarce, see Paul Hollister, Encyclopedia of Glass Paperweights (1969), pp.18-9 for a discussion.

A comparable square weight dated 1845 in several places is illustrated alongside a dated cylindrical weight by Herbert W L Way, Mrs Applewhaite-Abbott's Collection of Coloured Glass, in The Connoisseur (December 1922), p.217, fig.4. Compare to the domed paperweight signed 'POB' and dated 1845 in the Corning Museum of Glass (accession no. 78.3.143) and the example dated 1846 (accession no. 83.3.64), both of which contain a number of identical murrine including silhouettes of a duck and a horse.

Additional information

Bid now on these items

A remarkable façon de Venise reverse-painted glass picture, late 16th century

A façon de Venise wine glass, late 16th or early 17th century

A façon de Venise wine glass, second half 17th century

A remarkable Venetian latticinio plate or charger, late 17th century

A fine Silesian engraved beaker of 'Koula' type, Riesengebirge (Hirschberger Tal), late 17th century

A Bohemian engraved wine glass, early 18th century

A Bohemian engraved hunting beaker of 'Koula' type, late 17th century

A remarkable Potsdam engraved goblet by Gottfried Spiller, circa 1700-10

A fine Potsdam engraved goblet attributed to the workshop of Elias Rosbach, circa 1725-30

An early Bohemian engraved baluster goblet, circa 1700

A Dutch engraved armorial goblet, second quarter 18th century

A massive Bohemian engraved 'Four Seasons' beaker, late 17th century

A very rare Zechlin gilded and engraved Royal double portrait goblet and cover, circa 1733-35

An impressive Potsdam-Berlin engraved goblet and cover attributed to Elias Rosbach, circa 1735-40

A Dutch engraved goblet and cover, the glass Saxon, second quarter 18th century