词条 | Pairpoint Glass | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
| name = Pairpoint Glass Company (Pairpoint Manufacturing Company) | logo = Pairpoint-Glass-logo.png | logo_size = 260px | caption = | type = Private | foundation = 1837 | founder = Deming Jarves (Mount Washington Glass Co.) Thomas J. Pairpoint (Pairpoint Manufacturing Co.) | location = Sagamore, MA | key_people = Jeffrey Tulman (co-owner) Gary Tulman (co-owner) | industry = Glass Manufacturing | revenue = | operating_income = | net_income = | num_employees = | homepage = {{url|http://pairpoint.com}} }}Pairpoint Glass Company is an American glass manufacturer based in Sagamore, Massachusetts. It is currently the oldest operating glass company in the United States.[1][2] HistoryThe company was founded by Deming Jarves in 1837 in South Boston, Massachusetts, as the Mount Washington Glass Works.[1][3][4] Jarves had previously founded the New England Glass Company in 1818.[3][5] Mount Washington did not at first have an official name, and until around 1850 was informally known as Russell's Glass House, after Luther Russell, the glasshouse superintendent. The first known use of the Mount Washington name was in the 1857 publication History of South Boston.[3] In 1870, Mount Washington relocated to New Bedford, Massachusetts.[6] That year, the company was briefly renamed W. L. Libbey & Company, before being incorporated as the Mount Washington Glass Works the following year.[3] In 1876, the name was changed slightly, to the Mount Washington Glass Company.[5] From 1876 through 1881, the company produced an extensive line of lighting goods and other glassware, including glass chimneys, fine cut blown glass and pressed glassware.[3] In the 1880s, the company primarily produced art glass. In 1885, it introduced Burmese art glass, a translucent, heat reactive glass that shades from yellow at the bottom to pink at the top. The company became known for this type of glass, obtaining a British patent for it in 1886, and presenting a number of Burmese pieces to Queen Victoria.[3] In 1880, British silver designer Thomas Pairpoint (1838-1902) resigned his position as head designer at the Meriden Brittania Company and founded the Pairpoint Manufacturing Company, which was established in New Bedford as a silver manufacturer supplying Mount Washington with silver-plated metal mounts for its glass lamps and other products.[7][8][9][10] In 1894, the two companies merged and in 1900 were renamed the Pairpoint Corporation.[11][12] In 1939, the company was reorganized as Gundersen Glass Works, named after master glassblower and new owner Robert Gundersen. After Gundersen's death in 1952, the company became the Gundersen-Pairpoint Glass Works until 1957, when it was renamed a final time to Pairpoint Glass Company.[10] Now under the guidance of Robert Bryden, it ceased operations at its New Bedford plant and relocated briefly to East Wareham, Massachusetts. The company moved overseas in 1958 to leased facilities in Spain, exporting limited quantities of stemware, perfume bottles and paperweights back to the US. Pairpoint returned to the US in 1967, and in 1970 opened a newly-built factory in Sagamore, Massachusetts, near the Cape Cod Canal.[12] The invention of the light bulb and the corresponding rise of the use of electricity was central to the company's success in the late 19th century.[13] In the early 20th century through the early 1930s, its distinctive glass lampshades gained international popularity.[11] In the second half of the 20th century, Pairpoint went on a decline, when it started producing a less expensive, lower quality product in an attempt to expand its customer base and combat foreign competition.[1] In 2015, Jeffrey Tulman and his brother Gary Tulman acquired Pairpoint and returned the company to its classic high-end designs, reintroducing the revitalized product to collectors and luxury glass buyers.[1][14] ProductsPairpoint is known for three kinds of glass lampshades, originally produced from the mid-1890s through the mid-1920s: reverse painted landscape shades (where the glass is hand painted on the inside surface so colors appear softly through the glass), blown out reverse painted shades, and ribbed reverse painted shades, mostly with floral designs and landscape scenes.[7][15][16] In 1910, the company began using a spherical knop (or "bubble ball") on some of its pieces, a technique involving trapping air bubbles inside a piece of glass in a symmetrical pattern, which can be applied to ice buckets, decanters, glassware, and other pierces.[1][12] This became a trademark of the company.[12] Pairpoint's reverse painted lamps are generally considered to be the most popular and expensive of such lamps on the antique market.[16] Rare Pairpoint lamps have been sold for six figures (USD), while more commonly available lamps have sold in the high four figures.[7] The company produces a range of glass pieces, including custom pendants, sconces, chandeliers and accent lighting. Pairpoint also produces barware, candlesticks, bookends, bowls and vases, as well as a line of controlled bubble ball door knobs.[1] Pairpoint products are handmade in the US.[14] Museum collections and exhibitionsMore than 50 Pairpoint silver pieces from 1880 to 1929 are a part of the permanent collection of the Brooklyn Museum. These include pitchers, goblets and candlesticks.[17] Early Pairpoint pieces are also a part of the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, including silver candlesticks from 1905, a rose glass bowl from 1898, and a glass vase ca. 1886-94;[18] the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston;[19] and the New Bedford Museum of Glass.[14] A 2011 exhibition at the Corning Museum of Glass in Corning, New York, was titled Mt. Washington and Pairpoint: American Glass From the Gilded Age to the Roaring Twenties. It told the story of the company and featured over 150 pieces from the 1880s to the 1930s, including art glass, cut glass, kerosene and electric lamps, and decorative tableware.[13] Kenneth Morley Wilson, a renowned historian of glass manufacture in America, compiled a history of the company in Mt. Washington and Pairpoint Glass, in two volumes published in 2005 and 2011 by the Antique Collectors' Club of Woodbridge, England.[4][20] Milestones
See also
References1. ^1 2 3 4 5 John Zientek, "The Revival of Pairpoint, America's Oldest Operating Glass Company," Gear Patrol, November 25, 2015. 2. ^Ellen Albanese, [https://www.bostonglobe.com/lifestyle/travel/2016/06/09/the-cape-continues-add-its-rich-history-glass-making/gHDgKwUZiu87TiJqh3f24J/story.html "The Cape continues to add to its rich history of glass making,"] Boston Globe, June 10, 2016. 3. ^1 2 3 4 5 "History of Mt. Washington Glass Co.," The Antiquarian, 2008. 4. ^1 Wolfgang Saxon, [https://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/09/arts/design/kenneth-morley-wilson-83-renowned-glass-expert-dies.html "Kenneth Morley Wilson, 83, Renowned Glass Expert, Dies,"] New York Times, April 9, 2005. 5. ^1 "Mt. Washington – Pairpoint," The House of Brilliant Glass. Accessed June 29, 2016. 6. ^William C. Marcoux Jr, "Mount Washington Glass," The Journal of Antiques and Collectibles, April 2005. 7. ^1 2 Danielle Arnet, "Correct identification key to pricing vintage lamp," Chicago Tribune, June 15, 2012. 8. ^Jay Moore, "What's it worth: silver-plated castor set, Incolay jewelry box," Richmond Times-Dispatch, February 14, 2015. 9. ^Diane Tobin, [https://books.google.com/books?id=75t2CQAAQBAJ&pg=PT63&lpg=PT63&dq=%22thomas+pairpoint%22&source=bl&ots=oHxU4s79MB&sig=77PPWF9cr1fuDOjMedV-0x834qs&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiVrYrFjq3NAhXEbD4KHaH6BHo4ChDoAQgbMAA#v=onepage&q=%22thomas%20pairpoint%22&f=false The Meriden Flint Glass Company: An Abundance of Glass], Charleston, SC: The History Press, chapter 4, 2012. 10. ^1 "The Smart Collector: Pairpoint name no guarantee of high-flying price for ruby swan dish," Orlando Sentinel, March 27, 2011. 11. ^1 "Pairpoint Manufacturing Co.," Internet Antique Gazette. Accessed June 29, 2016. 12. ^1 2 3 Orva Heissenbuttel, "Pairpoint Glass Company," Rainbow Review Glass Journal, February 1975. 13. ^1 "Mt. Washington and Pairpoint: American Glass From the Gilded Age to the Roaring Twenties," Corning Museum of Glass, May 19, 2011. 14. ^1 2 Susan Curtin, [https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0760/1897/files/Cape_House_Pairpoint_Article.pdf?10642385956014665339 "Blown Glass,"] Cape House, October 11, 2015, pp. 44-46. 15. ^Carter Horsley, [https://www.nytimes.com/1981/10/18/nyregion/antiques-first-big-show-at-byrne-arena.html "First Big Show at Byrne Arena,"] New York Times, October 18, 1981. 16. ^1 Jean McClelland, "Reverse painted lamps a beautiful, practical art form," The Herald-Dispatch, August 4, 2013. 17. ^[https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/artists/7310/Pairpoint_Manufacturing_Company "Pairpoint Manufacturing Company – 1880-1929,"] Brooklyn Museum. Accessed June 29, 2016. 18. ^American Decorative Arts, metmuseum.org. Accessed June 29, 2016. 19. ^Pairpoint, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Accessed June 29, 2016. 20. ^[https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A42715-2005Apr10.html "Glass Expert and Curator Kenneth M. Wilson, 83,"] Washington Post, April 11, 2005. 21. ^"Thomas J. Fiocco – Obituary," Boston Globe, September 3, 2014. External links
5 : Glassmaking companies of the United States|Manufacturing companies established in 1837|Manufacturing companies based in Massachusetts|Glass art|Lighting brands |
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