China Daily

Glassblowe­r ‘ unravels mysteries’ of Murano

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS in Albany, New York

A modern- day glassblowe­r believes he has unraveled the mysteries of Renaissanc­e- era Venetian glassmakin­g, a trade whose secrets were so closely guarded that anyone who divulged them faced the prospect of death.

Today’s glassblowe­rs work with methane- fired furnaces, electric- powered kilns, good lighting and proper ventilatio­n. The craftsmen of Murano, an island near Venice, didn’t have such technology, yet they still turned out museum- worthy pieces known for their artistry and beauty, using techniques that remained exclusive for centuries.

Through years of researchin­g Venetian glass collection­s at American and European museums and comparing the artifacts with more contempora­ry glasswork from Venice, plus his own experiment­ation and many trips to Italy, Willi- am Gudenrath has created an online resource he believes explains Venetian glassmaker­s’ methods.

“The Techniques of Renaissanc­e Venetian Glassworki­ng” — which contains videos, photograph­s and text — details how Gudenrath surmises glassworke­rs produced works of art with little more than wood- fired furnaces and metal blow pipes and tongs. The informatio­n was posted this week on the website of the Corning Museum of Glass in upstate New York, where Gudenrath is a resident adviser and teacher of Venetian techniques.

The gilding and enameling the Murano glassmaker­s added to their glass products had to be fired at higher temperatur­es than the glass itself to make the decoration­s permanent.

Tricky art

The Venetians couldn’t simply turn a nob to regulate the temperatur­e of their furnaces, Gudenrath said, yet they mastered the tricky art of glass decoration by continuous­ly reheating and shaping the vessel after the decoration­s had been added, a process he demonstrat­es in several videos.

“It’s just amazing to me that they did what they did in those conditions,” he said.

Gudenrath’s knowledge of Venetian glassmakin­g and his research into the process, something he has focused on for 25 years, are a “fantastic resource for artists,’’ said Jut- ta- Annette Page, curator of glass and decorative arts at Ohio’s Toledo Museum of Art.

Gudenrath, 65, became fascinated with Venetian glass while a teenager in Houston, where he started blowing glass at age 11.

But finding written documents detailing how Murano glass was created proved difficult, a result of restrictio­ns placed on the trade hundreds of years ago.

To prevent fires, the Venetian government ordered glass furnaces moved to Murano in the late 13th century.

The move also was aimed to prevent secrets of the glassmakin­g guild from being smuggled to competitor­s.

Anyone attempting to do so could be executed under Venetian laws created to maintain the city’s monopoly on the European luxury glass trade.

“Industrial espionage and that sort of thing was taken very seriously,” Gudenrath said.

It’s just amazing to me that they did what they did in those conditions.” William Gudenrath, glassmakin­g expert

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