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Rare Signed NILS LANDBERG ORREFORS Expo Sweden Art Glass VASE 7.5" Tall

$ 187.7

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Type of Glass: Nils Landberg
  • Features: Signed
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Brand: Orrefors
  • Condition: Great Condition.
  • Color: Ruby Red
  • Object Type: Vase
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Style: Expo

    Description

    This is for a lovely Signed Nils Landberg Orrfeors Expo Sweden Art Glass Vase.
    Signed on Base:  Orrefors Expo 1794 Landberg Sweden
    Color: Ruby Red Transition to Clear
    Measures: 7.5" Tall x 2.30" Wide
    Circa 1950's
    Great Condition. No cracks or chips.
    Would make a great addition to any collection.
    N
    ils Landberg (Swedish, 1907-1991)- Nils Landberg studied at the Konstindustrieskolen in Gotenborg from 1923 to 1925 and then trained at the newly established school of engraving at the Orrefors Glasbruk for two years, with his compatriot Sven Palmqvist. Landberg subsequently studied in Italy and France before returning to Sweden, where he began working under Edward Hald (1883-1980) as an assistant and engraver at Orrefors. Around 1935, he began creating his own designs for the company and became a member of its in-house design team. His engraved glassware from this period was shown at both the 1937 Paris “Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne” and the 1939 New York World’s Fair. During the 1950s, Landberg experimented with abstracted and attenuated forms using either clear or delicately tinted glass. In these pieces, he pushed the medium’s tensile strength to its limits, giving the designs a powerful inner tension. Landberg’s famous ‘Tulpanglas’ (1957} with its slender waist was blown as a single piece and received a gold medal at the Milan XI Triennale in 1957. He also designed tableware and lighting as well as decorative doors and windows. Landberg retired from Orrefors in 1972, and fourteen years later the Orrefors Museum held a retrospective exhibition of his work.