Published: May 15, 2018 By

Catalogue EntryÌýPhotograph of a dark glass bowl, from a slightly raised angle against a neutral gray background.

From the Catalogue ofÌýAncient Glass in the University of Colorado Museum

Gift of H. Medill Sarkisian and Justine Sarkisian Rodriguez (1979)
Ìý(2008)
Height:Ìý3.8 cm
Diameter (max.):Ìý10.2Ìýcm
Roman, 1st century C.E.

Classification: Isings Form 3a;ÌýHarden Fabric 2 or 3

Description: Unworked lip on shallow bowl with somewhat sagged profile. 21 descend from pronounced shoulder to flat base of vessel.Ìý and flaking, to the extent that the original color is not discernable (at present it is several shades of brown).ÌýSagged (i.e., heated on a dome-shaped mold).

Comment: The weathering of this bowl has been extensiveÌýand it has been abused in other ways, as indicated by a patch of glue-like substance on side.ÌýNevertheless, the shape and what remains of the original coloring suggests this bowl may be mosaic (cf. Eisen 1927,Ìýpl. 32;Ìývon Saldern 1968, no. 12). Other examples of this shape are Hayes 1975, no. 50Ìýand Grose 1989, no. 232.

Discussion

The shape of this bowl was not determined byÌýfree-blowing,Ìýmold-blowing, orÌýcore-forming. It was made through a process called "sagging" or "slumping". This shaping technique involves taking a flat disk or sheet of pliable glassÌýand placing it on top of a solid moldÌýto form the shape and design on the interior of the vessel. Then the glass is worked as it lays "slumped" or "sagged" over the dome-shaped mold to create a design on the exterior of the vessel. This process means that this bowl was worked while upside down (1).Ìý

This bowl may have been made of mosaic glass, which is made from many small pieces of glass fused together in a kiln. The glass bits are laid side by side in a disk shapeÌýon a paddle, which is slid into a hot kiln. When the disk comes out of the kiln hot and pliable, the glass is all pressed together to form one circular sheet of glass. Then the flat glass is sagged to the bowl mold (2).

Footnotes

  1. Robert J. Charleston,ÌýMasterpieces of Glass: A World History from the Corning Museum of GlassÌý(New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1980): 39-40.
  2. Hugh Tait, ed.ÌýFive Thousand Years of GlassÌý(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1991): 218-221.

References

  • Eisen, G. A.ÌýGlass: Its Origin, History, Chronology, Technic and Classification to the Sixteenth Century, v. 1.ÌýNew York: W. E. Rudge,Ìý1927.
  • Grose, D. F.ÌýEarly Ancient Glass: Core-Formed, Rod-Formed, and Cast Vessels and Objects from the Late Bronze Age to the Early Roman Empire, 1600 B.C. to A.D. 50.ÌýNew York: Hudson Hills Press, 1989.
  • Hayes, J. W.ÌýRoman and Pre-Roman Glass in the Royal Ontario Museum.Ìý°Õ´Ç°ù´Ç²Ô³Ù´Ç:Ìý1975.
  • von Saldern, A.ÌýAncient Glass in the Museum of Fine Arts Boston. Greenwich, CT: New York Graphic Society, 1968.