Detail View: The AMICA Library: Clutha Vase

AMICA ID: 
MIA_.91.15
AMICA Library Year: 
1998
Object Type: 
Decorative Arts and Utilitarian Objects
Creator Name: 
Dresser, Christopher
Creator Nationality: 
European; British; English
Creator Role: 
designer
Creator Dates/Places: 
1834 - 1904
Gender: 
M
Creator Name-CRT: 
Christopher Dresser
Creator Name: 
James Couper and Sons
Creator Nationality: 
European; British; English
Creator Role: 
manufacturer
Creator Name-CRT: 
James Couper and Sons
Title: 
Clutha Vase
View: 
Front
Creation Date: 
about 1890
Creation Start Date: 
1880
Creation End Date: 
1900
Materials and Techniques: 
glass
Classification Term: 
handblown
Dimensions: 
H.20-1/4 x D.5-5/8 in. (at base)
Component Measured: 
overall
Measurement Unit: 
in
AMICA Contributor: 
The Minneapolis Institute of Arts
Owner Location: 
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
ID Number: 
91.15
Credit Line: 
Gift of Ruth and Bruce Dayton
Rights: 
Context: 

The first modern industrial designer, Christopher Dresser worked with a number of different British manufacturers of furniture, metalwork, wallpaper, ceramics and glass to create well-designed yet mass produced objects. For the Scottish company James Couper and Sons he designed a line of hand-blown glass produced with industrial techniques. The line was called Clutha, meaning "cloudy" in Gaelic, by the London retailer Liberty's. These deliberately bubbly and streaked glass vases and bottles were produced in a range of tertiary colors suitable to the mid and late nineteenth century British interior: greeny yellow, amber, lilac and turquoise. Metallic streaks were added to the glass to create jewel-like qualities imitative of Roman and Venetian glass.

Dresser, a botanist by training, but also an inveterate world traveler studied ceramics and glass from all cultures. The Clutha bottles and vases were inspired by Japanese, Persian and Indian water-sprinklers he saw at the South Kensington Museum in London (now the Victoria and Albert Museum).

Related Image Identifier Link: 
MIA_.1067c.tif