Page 7 - 2022 Glass Editorial
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the power to seal a deal between                         using wooden barrels and large pottery urns
                                            adversaries by adding meaning to                         that were stored in the cellars where light and
                                            negotiations made over feasts and                        moving air were not an issue when it came to
                                            momentous events as they clinked                         preserving its taste and quality. Those who
                                            glasses and adding sound to the                          could not afford to purchase wine in bulk
                                            signs of peace.                                          instead filled their own containers at local
                                               On display at CMoG is a rare                          wine shops or taverns, similar to the way we
                                            fragment of cameo glass made                             fill growlers at breweries today.
                                            sometime between 25 BCE to 50                              By the early 1800s, wineries themselves
                                            CE from the Mediterranean,                               began to store and ship their product in glass
                                            probably Italy. This piece of glass                      bottles, with paper labels with information
                                            was either cast or blown from two                        about the winery and vintage replacing the
                                            layers of glass, and the white glass                     stamps with names of individuals and taverns
                                            was partially carved away to create   “Fiasco” Flask with   who used the bottle. The introduction of a
             Cameo Glass Fragment with Grape                                       Basketry Cover,
               Harvest, 25 BCE-99 CE (Italy)   a detailed scene. The image on the                    three-part molded bottle in the 1820s
                                            glass is of a worker carrying a      1600-1700 (Italy)    solidified the standard cylindrical shape
                 Courtesy of Corning Museum of Glass
                                            harvest of grapes. The fragment is      Courtesy of Corning    of the wine bottle which is still recognizable
                                                                                    Museum of Glass
                                            just 1.75” wide by 2” high. The                          200 years later.
            vessel it came from is estimated to be 4.75” overall. The artistry is
            intricate and realistic. This is just a glimpse of the artistic inspiration   Making Wine Portable
            that arose from the process of making wine.
                                                                                 In the early 1600s in England, glass
                                                                              was becoming a more common material
                                                                              to conduct those purchases. As John
                                                                              Worlidge pointed out in his treatise on
                                                                              glass bottles in 1676, glass was stronger,
                                                                              less apt to leak, less likely to taint
                                                                              the contents than ceramic jugs. Glass
                                                                              was also transparent, and so easier to
                                                                              monitor the contents and determine if
                                                                              the vessel was clean.

                                                                                 “Glass bottles are preferred to
                                                                              stoneware bottles because stone bottles are
                                                                              apt to leak, and are rough in the mouth,
                                                                              that they are not easily uncorked; also they
                                                                              are more apt to taint than the other;   Figure of Bacchus on a Barrel,
                                                                              neither are they transparent, that you may   Possibly by Bernard  Perrot
                                                                              discern when they are foul, or clean.”   (1638-1709), about 1700
                                                                                            – John Worlidge, 1676      Courtesy of Corning Museum of Glass

              Mold-Blown Pitcher, 300–500   Oinochoe with Trefoil-Shaped Mouth,   The robust British glass wine bottle of which Worlidge spoke was
                  (Possibly the Eastern        500–400 BCE (Rhodes, Greece)    helped along by a quirk of glass history: early in the 1600s, King James I
              Mediterranean, Ancient Roman       Courtesy of Corning Museum of Glass    of England forbid glasshouses to use wood-fired furnaces in glassmaking.
             Empire)  Courtesy of Corning Museum of Glass
                                                                              Glass houses switched to coal as a fuel source. Because coal burns hotter
                                                                              than wood, glassmakers could increase the ratio of silica to sodium in
                                                                              the glass batch, resulting in a stiffer, stronger glass. Coal furnaces are
            Storing Wine                                                      also reducing environments, which has the effect of deepening the
               Over the centuries, winemakers studied the many components used   green color of the iron in the glass. Stronger, thicker, and darker glass
            in making wine. Refining the type of grape through breeding for the   than what had been available previously contributed to a bottle that was
            best flavor, most output, ability to sustain over time. Grapes were   more conducive to long-term storage of wine.
            grown all over the world but how weather, temperature, light, soil
            content, and accessibility to the market all played a role in the varieties                Serving Wine at Home
            of wine developed over time. With the immense attention given to the
            creation of wine, storing it was another issue altogether.                                    Back before the wine bottle was an
               Storage of wine was critical from its invention. Prior to the 1800s,                    everyday convenience used to purchase
            wine was kept in large ceramic containers or wooden casks. It was a race                   and store wine, those hefty wooden barrels
            against time to get the wine                                                               in the cellar made it difficult to bring wine
            from the producer to the                                                                   to the serving area without having to bring
            consumer before it spoiled due                                                             the entire cask into the household. Some
            to oxidation. The more affluent                                                            homeowners would install pipes from the
            were able to buy wine in bulk                                                              basement to the dining area to dispense
                                                                                                       wine into crocks or other serving pieces.
                                                                                                       But the experience of serving wine was
            From left to right: Wine Bottle with                                                       brought up a level in the mid-1700s by the
                Seal “R.A/S,” 1650–1660                                                                use of Wine Urns – much like the metal
             (England);  Wine Bottle with Seal                                                         samovar but made of glass with a spigot for
            “H. Gaige 1712,” 1712 (England);                                                           serving. Such a convenience was yet another
               Wine Bottle with Inscription                                                            showcase piece to reflect the owner’s
              “PATENT” H. Ricketts & Co.,
              Glass Works, 1821–1835; Wine                                      “Cantir” Drinking  Flask,   wealth and strong sense of style.
             Bottle with Seal “LAFITE/1887,”                                     1700–1800 (Catalonia,    CMoG has a beautiful lead glass
                  about 1887 (France)                                             Spain) Courtesy of Corning   accented with pewter Covered Wine Urn
                                                                                     Museum of Glass
                Courtesy of Corning Museum of Glass
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