VENETIAN GLASS BY CARLO SCARPA Goes on Display at the Met Museum of Art Today
Venetian Glass by Carlo Scarpa: The Venini Company, 1932-1947 at The Metropolitan Museum of Art is devoted to the work in glass of the influential Italian architect Carlo Scarpa (1906-1978). Scarpa created a unique and multifaceted body of work in architecture and design. In 1932, while in his mid-twenties, he was hired by Paolo Venini, founder of Venini Glassworks, to be an artistic consultant to the company. Until 1947, he worked closely with Venini master glass blowers and Mr. Venini himself to create more than two dozen styles, in the process pioneering techniques, silhouettes, and colors that thoroughly modernized the ancient tradition of glass blowing. The exhibition presents the results of this unique collaboration, featuring nearly 300 carefully selected works that highlight Scarpa's significant contribution to the art of Venetian glass.Sheena Wagstaff, the Metropolitan Museum's Leonard A. Lauder Chairman of the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art, said: "We have the great fortune of partnering with the prestigious museum Le Stanze del Vetro to take up a 'once-in-a-lifetime' opportunity to bring to New York glass works of extraordinarily high caliber, that have never before been seen in any American museum. Visitors will encounter beautiful, translucent, and ethereal glass vessels, created from Scarpa's radical pushing and expanding of glass-blowing techniques to their absolute limit. We also have an unprecedented opportunity to show Scarpa's glass works alongside exquisite objects drawn from the Museum's collections of Qing porcelain, ancient Greek and Roman cast glass, and 19th-century Murano vessels, whose designs were deeply inspirational to Scarpa."
Several objects drawn from the Museum's departments of Asian Art, European Sculpture and Decorative Arts, and Greek and Roman Art are included in the exhibition and displayed along with the works by Scarpa that their designs inspired.Credits & Related Information
Venetian Glass by Carlo Scarpa: The Venini Company, 1932-1947 is presented at The Metropolitan Museum of Art by the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art under the auspices of Sheena Wagstaff. The exhibition is organized by Nicholas Cullinan, Curator, assisted by Mary Clare McKinley, Research Assistant, both of the Museum's Department of Modern and Contemporary Art.The exhibition is an adaptation of Carlo Scarpa. Venini 1932-1947, organized by the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, Venice, and Pentagram Stiftung for presentation at Le Stanze del Vetro, Venice, in 2012, curated by Marino Barovier.The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue (paperback, $50) providing a complete record of the glass works created at Venini during Scarpa's tenure there as an artistic collaborator.
Among the education programs organized in conjunction with the exhibition are exhibition tours; a Sunday Studio-Light and Color: Modern Glass on Sunday, December 8, andSunday, December 22; Drop-in Drawing-Light and Transparency: Modern Glass on Friday, December 20; and a Sunday at the Met on February 9, 2014, in which artists Carol Bove and Josiah McElheny join curator Nicholas Cullinan to discuss how Carlo Scarpa's architecture, museological displays, and work in glass continue to influence and inspire artists today.The exhibition will be featured on the Museum's website at www.metmuseum.org.

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