Giovanni Giacomuzzi (1817-1872) was the driving force behind the celebrated 19th-century Venetian beadmaking and glassworking firm of Fratelli Giacomuzzi fu Angelo, one of whose bead sample books is described in the accompanying report. This tribute by a learned contemporary summarizes Giacomuzzi\u27s accomplishments and sheds light on the life of a much-honored master glassworker
It would be nearly impossible to overstate the importance and influence of Gian Lorenzo Bernini (159...
The stained glass windows of Orsanmichele have never been the focus of a comprehensive stylistic, ar...
With the possible exception of the Egyptian and Syrian beadmakers of Roman times, no glass bead prod...
The sample book described herein displays the wound glass beads produced during the third quarter of...
One of the earliest detailed descriptions of the Venetian bead industry is contained in an obscure b...
Interesting accounts of the manufacture of Venetian glass beads turn up in the most unlikely places....
Bead Making at Murano and Venice, by B. Harvey Carroll, Jr., is a rare eyewitness account of beadma...
In 1893, Irene Ninni published a succinct account of a large but little-known group of Venetian wome...
Stylistic changes in a sculptor’s oeuvre are simultaneously a challenge and a cause of dilemmas for ...
In October 2013, esteemed scientific instrument scholar Anita McConnell contacted the Whipple Museum...
With the invention of eyeglasses around 1280 near Pisa, the mundane medium of glass transformed earl...
Since its establishment in Milan in 1919 by Mario Buccellati, a jeweler’s apprentice, the famed Ital...
When I brought to Florence the death mask of Prof. Angelo Angeli, earlier this year, I was greeted m...
Press Release from La Ragnatela/The Spiderweb: Works by Giampaolo Seguso from the Corning Museum of ...
Born in 1925, Mario Giacomelli died in November 2000. He trained initially as a typographer and his ...
It would be nearly impossible to overstate the importance and influence of Gian Lorenzo Bernini (159...
The stained glass windows of Orsanmichele have never been the focus of a comprehensive stylistic, ar...
With the possible exception of the Egyptian and Syrian beadmakers of Roman times, no glass bead prod...
The sample book described herein displays the wound glass beads produced during the third quarter of...
One of the earliest detailed descriptions of the Venetian bead industry is contained in an obscure b...
Interesting accounts of the manufacture of Venetian glass beads turn up in the most unlikely places....
Bead Making at Murano and Venice, by B. Harvey Carroll, Jr., is a rare eyewitness account of beadma...
In 1893, Irene Ninni published a succinct account of a large but little-known group of Venetian wome...
Stylistic changes in a sculptor’s oeuvre are simultaneously a challenge and a cause of dilemmas for ...
In October 2013, esteemed scientific instrument scholar Anita McConnell contacted the Whipple Museum...
With the invention of eyeglasses around 1280 near Pisa, the mundane medium of glass transformed earl...
Since its establishment in Milan in 1919 by Mario Buccellati, a jeweler’s apprentice, the famed Ital...
When I brought to Florence the death mask of Prof. Angelo Angeli, earlier this year, I was greeted m...
Press Release from La Ragnatela/The Spiderweb: Works by Giampaolo Seguso from the Corning Museum of ...
Born in 1925, Mario Giacomelli died in November 2000. He trained initially as a typographer and his ...
It would be nearly impossible to overstate the importance and influence of Gian Lorenzo Bernini (159...
The stained glass windows of Orsanmichele have never been the focus of a comprehensive stylistic, ar...
With the possible exception of the Egyptian and Syrian beadmakers of Roman times, no glass bead prod...