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Venice - Isola di San Giorgio Maggiore - Le Stanze Del Vetro - Tapio Wirkkala at Venini and Toni Zuccheri at Venini - Twin Exhibitions


Le Stanze Del Vetro
Tapio Wirkkala at Venini - Toni Zuccheri at Venini
Twin Exhibitions
 
Tapio Wirkkala at Venini and Toni Zuccheri at Venini are two side-by-side exhibitions at Le Stanze del Vetro - until March 13 - curated by Marino Barovier and dedicated to two artists and designers who were active at the furnace mainly in the second half of the 1960s. They both contributed, with their strong personalities, to the character of the production of the glassworks. In those transformational years, Venini was able on the one hand to present new models without giving up the use of colour, and on the other to respond to the new minimalist requirements in the world of design. The first aspect was developed in particular by Toni Zuccheri, to whom we owe the extraordinary series of fowl and farmyard animals, which were soon joined by vases in bright colours with organic lines, inspired by the plant kingdom. From 1966 the furnace also entered in a collaboration with Finnish designer Tapio Wirkkala, who brought his experience with glass at the Iittala glassworks to Venice by combining Nordic culture with Murano craft, achieving remarkable results.
https://lestanzedelvetro.org/en/exhibitions/tapio-wirkkalatoni-zuccherialla-venini/
Tapio Wirkkala
Lapponi - 1966
 
A distinctive feature of the design of these objects is the wide flared rim, the upper section of which brings to mind a stylised headdress. From the available graphic evidence, it can be argued that the series was created initially for the Venice Biennale of 1966. 
 
 
"I have the feeling that Tapio's happiest moments were anchored in Venice and Lapland.  In the South and the North. They share a reflection of water, the limpid air, the movement of a long dark boat". 
Maaria Wirkkala
from the catalogue Tapio Wirkkala at Venini

Tapio Wirkkala
Medusa - 1966

Exhibited at the 33rd Biennale of Venice in 1966, the Meduse series is an attempt by Wirkkala to combine Nordic design with the traditional Murano techniques, such asfiligrana.
 

Tapio Wirkkala alla Venini - installation view - photo - Enrico Fiorese - copyright -Tapio Wirkkala - SIAE - 2021
courtesy - Le Stanze del vetro

Tapio Wirkkala
Ai Lieti Calici - 1966
 
 
"When my parents visited Venice for the first time, Paolo Venini sent his private gondola to pick them up from their hotel."
Maaria Wirkkala
from the catalogue Tapio Wirkkala at Venini  
 
Tapio Wirkkala
Gondolieri - 1966
 
This series has the characteristic contours of the gondolier’s hat.The vases, with a cylindrical body and wide rim, are made of transparent glass with several colours joined by the incalmo technique. 


Tapio Wirkkala
Bolle - 1966-1967
 
The most famous Bolle series designed by Tapio Wirkkala, have enjoyed considerable success over the years. The series includes vases with evocative shapes, with a flattened globular body.  These objects are made of thin, transparent glass in two colours joined by the incalmo technique. 

Tapio Wirkkala
Silma - 1966-1967
 
The Silma series is made of monochrome glass with the inclusion of two large polychrome murrine, each with a circular core, indicated in the catalogue as ‘eyes’ from which the term Silma comes, which in Finnish means ‘eye’. 
 


Tapio Wirkkala
Coreani - 1966-1967
 
Coreani is one of the best known series designed by Tapio Wirkkala, recognisable by its distinctive two-colour technique with large twisted bands generally in verde mela and acquamaretransparent glass, but also, to a lesser extent, in green and purple. The basic idea is that of a spiral, a recurring theme in Wirkkala’s work. In this case the two colours spiral around each other to form the walls of the piece. The working process provides initially for the production of a pea (small hollow glass ball) of cristallo on which two bands of colour are applied under heat, obtaining a two-colour ball.
 

Tapio Wirkkala
Coppe - 1970-1981
 
 
Tapio Wirkkala
Filigrane di Tapio - 1970
 
Indicative of Wirkkala’s production for Venini in the 1970s, the Filigrane di Tapio include a series of vases and bowls  in white - lattimo - and black filigrana joined by the incalmo technique. These are artefacts in which the essentiality of the design is accompanied by a play of opaque and semitransparent effects, which seems aimed at marrying design and tradition. 
 

Tapio Wirkkala
 Pavoni - 1981c.
 
For the Pavoni,  Wirkkala used the filigrana technique and that of fenicio glass to create artefacts with a characteristic structure where the continuity of the filigrane is interrupted by a kind of vertical groove which changes the pattern.
 

Tapio Wirkkala
 Piatti di Tapio - 1967-1981
 
In his approach to Murano glass Tapio Wirkkala also dealt with murrina, which he interpreted in his own way. He created some unusual large polychrome murrine with geometric motifs or abstract designs. Some of these murrine were used in the production of a series of transparent plates with two or three colours joined by the incalmotechnique.  In the Venini Glassware Catalogue, 1967 the series was referred to as Piatti di Tapio, eleven coloured variants were proposed, each marked by a letter of the alphabet. Some examples were exhibited in 1968 at the 34th Venice Biennale and in Turin, at the second edition of Eurodomus
 
 
Congratulations
Marino Barovier
Curator - 10 exhibitions
Stanze del Vetro
 


 Toni Zuccheri At Venini
 
Experimentation with the material of glass and the processes for shaping it are the distinctive marks of Toni Zuccheri who, while still a student of architecture, was invited to the Venini glassworks with the task of designing a bestiary in glass, which was displayed at the Venice Biennale in 1964.  In this way he began an association which, albeit intermittently, continued for a good part of his life. He also worked as an architect and later became interested in communications.
 
 Tronchi - 1967  
 
 
Toni Zuccheri
Ninfee - 1967

The Ninfee series, most of which are large in size are intended as plant holders, receptacles for bunches of flowers or table centrepieces of a remarkable figurative impact. They are distinguished by their original shape with strong ribbing and waving rims, associated with a glass pattern of thin ribbing and with evocative chromatic effects. 
 
 
Toni Zuccheri
 Scolpiti - 1967

The Scolpiti series includes vases of great sculptural and figurative significance made of opaque glass and cristallo glass  they have in common the presence of two vertical contraposed ‘fissures’ in cristallo glass interrupting the continuity of the coloured surface.  Some pieces of this series were exhibited in Venice at the ‘contested’ Biennale of 1968. 
 
 
Toni Zuccheri
Crepuscoli - 1964 
 
The Crepuscoli series of coloured transparent glass vases, of which the distinctive mark is the presence of a convexity and/or concavity visible in transparency is mostly made in a different colour from the walls of the piece. In some of these models the personal reflection of Zuccheri on the works of Thomas Stearns of 1961–62 is evident. Examples of Crepuscoli were exhibited in 1964 at the 32nd Venice Biennale and in New York, at the exhibition Glass: Czechoslovakia and Italy held at the Museum of Contemporary Crafts. 
 
 
Toni Zuccheri
Grovigli - 1964
 
The series represents, together with Giade, an experiment on the use of metal filaments to obtain new glass patterns by applying or incorporating them in vitreous substance.  The theme, already tackled by Ercole Barovier with the technique of colorazione a caldo senza fusione, in particular in the series Crepuscolo - 1930s - is developed here in a completely personal way with unprecedented results precisely due to the formal value Zuccheri assigns to the groviglio - tangle - of threads in their solidity and their bundling in suspension in the vitreous mass.
 
 
Toni Zuccheri
Giade - 1964
 
The series stems from Zuccheri's experiments with vitreous materials in the early years of his collaboration with Venini.  Bottles and vases made with an unusual opaque glass enhanced by filaments of copper or brass applied under heat and embedded in the wall of the piece.  Their presence creates a mottled surface evoking that of the semi-precious stone from which these glass pieces take their name. Nine pieces were exhibited at the 1964 Venice Biennale.
 

"And here a Venetian, Toni Zuccheri ... an artist of good taste who “discovered” for me and implemented, at Murano, at the school of Ca’ Venini, that knowledgeable and ingenious school, “discovered”, I repeat, all or nearly all that can be done and has not yet been done with thick glass or inside thick glass with the colours of the glass pieces that make it up and with their different textures, with the insertions of murrine, of canes, of threads and delicate nets of metal or of filigrana. A new world.’ 
Gio Ponti
Domus - March -  1966 
 
Gio Ponti / Toni Zuccheri
Vetrate Grosse
 Cassa di Risparmio di Padova e Rovigo
 Padova - 1964 
 

Toni Zuccheri
Bestiario

 
At the end of 1961, while still a university student, Toni Zuccheri was introduced to the Venini glassworks, with the objective of creating a bestiario - bestiary - in glass. The project came to fruition at the 32nd Venice Biennale in 1964, where two guinea fowls and a turkey in murrine glass were exhibited, together with three ducks in polychrome glass. 

Toni Zuccheri
Tacchino  1963-1964
 

 Toni Zuccheri
Gabbiano - 1980 - Gabbiano - 1980 - Gallo - 1979
 
 
Toni Zuccheri
Fenice - 1986-1987
 
 
Toni Zuccheri
Fenice - 1986-1987 
 
Having re-established his association with the firm now under new ownership, Zuccheri continued his ceaseless research which would lead to new challenges, consisting in part in the development of subjects already dealt with in the preceding years in other contexts. This was the case with the Fenice - Phoenix - a subject he had tackled on a smaller scale in the study and realisation of the Fenice d’Oro prize for the best actor/actress at theVenice Film Festival in 1981. Between 1986 and 1987, with the cooperation of the Brustolin art foundry of Verona with which Zuccheri usually worked, the project took the shape of a large-scale fenice in lost wax bronze with elements of mostly opaque polychrome glass.


This post first appeared on Contessanally, please read the originial post: here

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Venice - Isola di San Giorgio Maggiore - Le Stanze Del Vetro - Tapio Wirkkala at Venini and Toni Zuccheri at Venini - Twin Exhibitions

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