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259

Carlo Scarpa

Frame

Estimate
£1,000 - 1,500
£2,413
Lot Details
Mezza filigrana glass, glass, brass, plywood.
circa 1937
25 x 19.8 x 15.7 cm (9 7/8 x 7 3/4 x 6 1/8 in.), fully extended
Produced by Venini & C., Murano, Italy. Brass stand impressed VENINI/MURANO.
Catalogue Essay
The present model frame was exhibited at the VII Milan Triennale, 1940.

Carlo Scarpa

Italian | B. 1906 D. 1978
Phillips Design has a deep-rooted passion for the work of Carlo Scarpa, one of the twentieth century's great poets, whose rhythms, lines and materials — a grammar of space — appeal both as a local response to the architect's birth city, Venice, and a universal language of ordered dynamism.

Carlo Scarpa graduated with a degree in architectural drawing from the Accademia di Belle Arti in Venice in 1926. In the years that followed, he worked as a teaching assistant for a former professor, ran his own architectural practice in Venice and worked as a freelance artist for M.V.M. Cappellin glassworks. When M.V.M. Cappellin went bankrupt in 1932, Scarpa joined Venini & C. in Murano, where he served as artistic director until 1947. During his tenure at Venini, Scarpa developed a host of new techniques — in particular, mezza filigrano, a bollicine and corroso — that catapulted the centuries-old tradition of Venetian glassblowing to the forefront of modernist design.
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