Cup and Saucer

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Cup and Saucer

India, Gujarat, Kapadwanj, circa 1750-1800
Furnishings; Serviceware
Blue glass
Overall: Height: 2 3/8 in. (6.03 cm); Cup: 2 1/4 x 3 5/8 x 2 3/4 in. (5.72 x 9.21 x 6.99 cm); Saucer: 7/8 x 4 1/16 in. (2.22 x 10.32 cm)
Museum Acquisition Fund (M.89.83.5a-b)
Not currently on public view

Curator Notes

This blue glass teacup or coffee cup is modeled in morphological form on a lota (comparable to a compressed version of M.89.83.8)....
This blue glass teacup or coffee cup is modeled in morphological form on a lota (comparable to a compressed version of M.89.83.8). It has a spherical lower body, tapering shoulders, a tall vertical neck, and an everted rim. The ear-shaped loop handle is solid. It has a deep saucer with slightly concave side walls and a reinforced rim. Tea and coffee were introduced into Europe and their colonies by the mid-17th century. Large numbers of rich monochrome glass vessels were produced in the city kilns of Kapadwanj near Ahmedabad during the 17th through early 19th centuries. The most common colors are peacock blue, dark blue, and deep green, with amber, violet, and wine red also featured. Kapadwanj glass is characteristically opaque or translucent with noticeable impurities. The glass is brittle and often comparatively thick, even though the vessels are blown rather than molded. Elegant and lyrical forms distinguish Kapadwanj glass, with rosewater sprinklers, wine cups, water tumblers, spouted pouring vessels, and bird-shaped inkwells being the most popular. The glass vessels typically derive their shapes from forms found in earlier Timurid and Mughal metalware and hardstone carving. Extensive glass production continued at the site until the early 19th century when technically superior English lead glass began to be favored in the Indian marketplace. See M.89.83.1a-b–.10.
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Bibliography

  • Markel, Stephen.  "Indian and 'Indianate' Glass Vessels in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art."  Journal of Glass Studies 33 (1991):  82-92.