History of Paperweights
http://www.museum.state.il.us/exhibits/barker/hist_pw.php
Nineteenth century revival of the glass industry
In early nineteenth-century Europe, a new creative potential developed in the decorative arts. An increasingly urban population and an expanding market of goods created by the Industrial Revolution stimulated the manufacture of many new decorative novelties. In the mid-1840s, glass paperweights appeared. They were a wholly modern, functional glass form that drew upon the ancient glassmaking techniques of millefiori and lampwork and the late-eighteenth century technique of cameo incrustation
The sudden emergence and popularity of paperweights can be attributed not only to their decorative appeal but also to a growing Victorian leisure-time interest in letter writing. This fashionable upper and middle class pastime assured their profitable manufacture along with many other glass accessories related to letter writing, all of which were purchased inexpensively at stationery and novelty shops.
Appearance of French paperweights
The exact year and origin of the manufacture of the first glass paperweight is problematical, but the first documented appearance can be traced to the Exhibition of Austrian Industry held in Vienna in 1845. The paperweights of Pietro Bigaglia of Venice were displayed at this exhibition. Knowledge of their existence was reportedly soon brought to the attention of the Saint-Louis glass factory in France, which immediately began to manufacture its own weights. A paperweight from Saint Louis dated 1845 is known, as well as one from Murano, Italy.
A second major French glasshouse, the Clichy factory, is also thought to have been manufacturing weights as early as 1845. A close concentric millefiori pedestal weight in the Barker collection is the earliest-dated known weight produced by the Clichy factory. The glided mount on this weight bears the inscription ";ESCALIER DE CRISTAL 1845." It is highly speculative, however, that the engraved date actually refers to the year of the weight's manufacture. The Escalier de Cristal was a novelty shop in Paris; consequently, the mount could have been added at any time.
The entry of a third leading French glasshouse, the Baccarat factory, into paperweightmaking is marked by existing weights enclosing the date 1846. Factories in Bohemia and England followed suit with the earliest-dated known weights from each locale inscribed "1848." In the decade or so following 1845, the three great French glasshouses of Saint Louis, Clichy, and Baccarat competed with one another in the manufacture of the most beautiful and the best executed weights. The results were a myriad of artistically conceived millefiori designs and lampworked motifs, near technical perfection of the glassmaker's skill, and great quantities of weights produced.
The Classic Period
This period of competitive manufacture, which captures paperweightmaking at its best, had come to be termed the Classic Period of French paperweights. It ranged in date from circa 1845 to 1855, although the time span is arbitrary and may extend slightly earlier or later (possibly through 1860) than the given decade. Perhaps the most highly praised paperweights of the French Classic Period are those produced by the Clichy factory. Clichy was the only French glasshouse whose weights were displayed at the Great Exposition at the Crystal Palace in London in 1851, and again, at the New York Crystal Palace in 1853. These public celebrations of the union of science and art in technology brought paperweights to the attention of the world. They were viewed by thousands of visitors, including a large American audience, and served to usher in the American Classic Period of paperweightmaking, which extended from 1852 through the 1870s, long after the popularity of paperweights had declined in Europe.
Modern paperweights
Paperweights continued to be produced in the twentieth century. Baccarat and Saint Louis continue to produce elegant weights reminiscent of the Classic Period, as well as modern designs. American glass companies and glass artists also continue creating paperweights in the traditional styles and create new traditions of their own.
Antique paperweights were made primarily in three French factories, between 1845 and 1860, in Baccarat, St. Louis, and Clichy. Weights (mainly of lesser quality) were also made in the United States, Great Britain, and elsewhere, though Bacchus (UK) and New England Glass Company (USA) produced some that equaled the best of the French. Modern weights have been made from about 1950 to the present.
The Morton D. Barker Paperweight Collection contains objects that were manufactured in Europe, the United States, and Asia.
The three manufacturers most renowned for the production of paperweights in the ninetheenth century were the French firms of Baccarat, Saint Louis, and Clichy. They produced the highest quality glass in Europe at that time. A fourth French paperweight maker was Pantin. Paperweights were being manufactured from about 1845 in France, and production continued until about 1860, when they went out of fashion.
American glass companies represented in the Barker Collection are the New England Glass Company, Boston & Sandwich Glass Company, Morgantown Glassware Guild, and Whitall & Tatum Company. Individual glass artists represented are Ronald Hansen, and Charles Kaziun, and Emil Larson, who also worked for several glass companies.
British glass companies are also represented in the collection by a millefiori weight by George Bacchus and Sons of Birmingham, and two objects attributed to Apsley Pellatt of London.
Glass paperweights or other objects from Sweden, Bohemia, and China are also found in the collection. A few paperweights cannot be positively attributed to any specific manufacturer or country.
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