Modern 2.0 Inc.

Vintage Steven Maslach Signed and Dated Dichroic Studio Glass Perfume

Vintage Steven Maslach Signed and Dated Dichroic Studio Glass Perfume


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Directory: New Century: Glass: Functional: Pre 1990: Item # 1472702

Please refer to our stock # 00156-2022 when inquiring.
Modern 2.0
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Melbourne, Florida 32935
USA
904.612.1851

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 $925.00 
Offered is a vintage Steven Maslach iridescent studio glass perfume bottle. Because of two dichroic surfaces, the base, and one side, the bottle changes colors in different lights, angles, and environments. The bottle and matching stopper, which resemble an iceberg, have what appear to be rough cut free form edges, although they are smooth to the touch. The bottle is approximately 6 "tall, including the stopper, by 4 ½ "wide by 2 ½ "deep, signed and dated 1990 on the base as shown, and in good to excellent condition, with one unnoticeable repair to the stopper and no other chips, scuffs, or repairs noted. Born in 1950 in San Francisco, California, Steven Maslach currently lives and works on Bainbridge Island, Washington. Maslach studied under Marvin Lipofsky and Sam Herman while attending California College of Arts and Crafts and founded his glass studio in 1971. Maslach is a significant contemporary glass artist. He is well-respected in the art glass community and has served on the Boards of the American Craft Council and the Glass Art Society. His work, known for its elegant form and rich color, is highly valued. Maslach was the first to use dichroic glass, which changes colors under different lighting conditions and viewing angles, in the decorative arts beginning in the late 1970s. Used to protect its astronauts and spacecraft sensors from the harsh rays of unfiltered sunlight and radiation, NASA revitalized the production of dichroic glass in the 1950s and 1960s. Inventive and ever-changing, his work may combine blown and cast glass, steel, copper, and stone. Color may be a fluid color inclusion or the reflected purity of dichroic color filters. Maslach’s work is found in many museums, including the Corning Museum of Glass, the Smithsonian Institute, the Chrysler Museum of Art (Norfolk, Virginia), the Detroit Institute of Arts, and the American Craft Museum.