Page 8 - 2022 Glass Editorial
P. 8

with Standard from Ireland in its collection. Made in about 1785, this
            cut-glass beauty stands just over two feet tall and, unfortunately, could
            not fit in the display cases within the exhibit. Not to be missed is a
            demonstration on the making of this delicate glass piece filmed in 2021
            and available to view on YouTube or by using a line at
            www.cmog.org/video/fire-and-vine-hot-glass-live-stream-george-kennard
               The enjoyment and satisfaction to be
            had when drinking wine from a glass
            drinking vessel became popular very
            quickly. People have drunk wine from
            glass for more than 2,500 years, and the
            first stemmed goblets were made more
            than 1,500 years ago. Beyond the general
            endurance of the stemmed shape, wine
            goblets appear in all shapes, sizes, colors,                               Wineglass in "RC105" Pattern, H.P. Sinclaire and Company,
            patterns, glass techniques, and more,
                                                                                         J. Hoare & Company, 1912  Courtesy of Corning Museum of Glass
            speaking to the wide variety of drinking
            customs and the various roles wine played                            A focal point of Fire & Vine is a dense display of dozens of wine
            different societies. The Roman satirist                           glasses from around the world, representing many styles and tastes,
            Petronius noted around 60 CE that he                              fit for a variety of occasions. The delicate stemware has been part of
            preferred glass because it doesn’t smell   Wine Jug in “Russian”  Pattern,   countless life moments. The oldest piece of wine drinkware featured in
            and it provides a better tasting experience    1882-1890          the exhibit is more than 2,500 years old.
            than gold – although prone to breakage.                              This display does follow the trend that wine glasses have gotten
                                                      Courtesy of Corning Museum of Glass
                                                                              bigger over time. “A 2017 British Medical Journal report found that the
            The Evolution of the Wine Glass                                   capacity of the average wine glass increased seven times between 1700
                                        According to Katherine Larson, goblets   and 2017, with the biggest jumps in size occurring in the 1980s and
                                     like the stemmed glasses we recognize as   1990s,” as noted in a pix.wine article.
                                     today’s wine glasses started to appear in the
                                     3rd and 4th centuries. “Sometimes they
                                     have handles; sometimes, they don’t,” she
                                     says. “They start popping up from that era
                                     in the area that is now Israel, Lebanon,
                                     Syria—that area of the Eastern
                                     Mediterranean—and then that style of
                                     glass expands throughout the ancient
                                     Roman world and beyond.”
                                        In the 1700s and 1800s, a standard
                                     service of glassware for a wealthy person in
                                     western Europe or America may have
                                     included different glasses for cordials and
                                     spirits, brandy, punch, sherry, champagne,
             Decanter and Wine glass in   ale, and cider, but only one glass designated
               “Twin City” Pattern,    for wine. Occasionally, glasses may have
               J. Hoare & Company,    been marked for popular wines like claret
                   1887-1895         or Madeira.
             Courtesy of Corning Museum of Glass    Red and white wine glasses start to   White Wine Glass,   Wineglass, 1945-1965   Goblet, Yasuko Ujiie
                                                                                    1950-1951
                                                                                                                                (1947), 1984
                                                                                                           Courtesy of Corning
                                     appear around the turn of the 20th century.   Courtesy of Corning      Museum of Glass     Courtesy of Corning
            In the post-World War II economic boom, the Austrian glass company      Museum of Glass                              Museum of Glass
            Riedel paired up master glassblowers with wine experts to create a series
            of stemware that would optimize the tasting experience for different
            varietals of wine. The resulting “Sommeliers” series of glasses is a   Winemaking and Science
            refined and elegant service that showcases the talents of glassmakers and   According to Chris Gerling and Anna Katharine Mansfield of
            winemakers alike.                                                 Cornell AgriTech in a post they provided to CMoG, they explain the
                                                                              role of “wine” and “laboratory” this way: “(they) don’t have a lot in
                                                                              common – one’s an agricultural product steeped in history and
                                                                              tradition, and the other is the sterile domain of lab-coated scientists. As
                                                                              it turns out, the art of wine involves a lot of science, and the science of
                                                                              wine involves a lot of glass! Even the least scientific among us are
                                                                              familiar with the cartoon images of wildly-shaped glassware full of
                                                                              brightly-colored bubbling liquids … and, yes, the wine lab has stuff like
                                                                              that. But we use glass to analyze grapes and wine in all sorts of
                                                                              unexpected ways, starting in the vineyard.”
                                                                                 In the vineyard, grape growers use a tool called a refractometer,
                                                                              which contains a glass prism, to measure the amount of sugar present
                                                                              in the grape and determine the precise moment to harvest. After the
                                                                              grapes are harvested and pressed, the resulting juice ages in barrels. As
                                                                              the wine ages, winemakers extract small samples for tasting with a glass
                                                                              tube called a wine thief. The Volatile Acid Still tests for volatile acids
                                                                              such as vinegar, which are caused by the presence of bacteria, and a glass
                                                                              hydrometer measures the sugar and alcohol content in the wine. By
                                                                              floating a glass hydrometer in the fermenting liquid, winemakers can
                  Wineglass, Tiffany Studios, 1902-1932   Courtesy of Corning Museum of Glass
                                                                              determine when aging is complete.
            6           Journal of Antiques and Collectibles
   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13