Flowers in Glass
Stained glass may be considered an art of painting, but a painting with light. Its most unique effect is always the product of coloring, refracting, obscuring and fragmenting the light. Throughout its thousand-year history stained glass was almost exclusively used in church windows. Only in the 19th century it entered in private houses, finding its real breakthrough with the Art Nouveau architects who considered natural light one of their foremost interest in quality house building.
The architect Ernest Blérot
designed a splendid corner house in Art Nouveau style, nowadays used as a bar called "Porteuse d'Eau". Applying the new concept
of light in the style en vogue he integrated into the building a profusion of
stained glass windows and this stunning glass dome at its centre, sustained by a
massive marble column. Green and blue glass represent
the oversized flowers against a bright yellow background.
Dome in Rue Vanderschrick 25 |
Pure Art Nouveau lines can be devised in the design of these beautiful window frames in the same building "Porteuse d'Eau" by Ernest Blérot, in the popular quarter of St. Gilles. Thanks to its present function of bar the building can be easily accessed for due admiration. Several of these windows light the ground floor of the establishment. Its lower parts are kept in transparent glass interrupted only by curvy wooden lines while the upper parts contain this elegant stylized flower motif composed with differently textured glass. Red petals in opalesque glass encircle a white flower on a creamy background in ripple glass.
Fanlight in Rue Charles V, 58
Surprisingly, this otherwise classic façade on Rue Charles V, 58 in the European quarter shows a huge two-floor staircase window with a precious Art Nouveau design. The image presented here is the small fanlight over the entrance. Stylized flowers in lively green and delicate mauve shades, cut from opalescent glass, are set against a squared backdrop in ripple glass. The round yellow pieces are cut from bottoms of bottles. This masterly handling of different glass qualities indicate great skill of the anonymous glass master making the window particularly attractive.
Maison Frison
Victor Horta, the prodigious Art Nouveau architect, created a highly innovative dwelling in Rue Lebeau 25, next to Sablon, in Brussels for the Frison family. The condition of a typical narrow but deep building site induced him to devise a plan with new sources of light. Here he connected the front of the house with the back garden by a curbed glass roof. An iron structure elaborated in beautiful curves, reminiscent of stylized trees, sustain the glassed roof. Simple transparent glass squares are bordered by a highly attractive curvy design in bright yellow while the centre displays one single tree-like image with a roundish crown. Most stained glass works are anonymous but this masterpiece has a signature: Raphael Evaldre. Maison Frison has been habilitated as Art Gallery and as such may provide a glimpse into the building’s interior. Horta's faculty of producing a total art work is evident also in other decorative details such as the beautiful stair landing in whiplash curves.
Rue Darwin, 15
One of the
few houses where E. Blerot not only used decorative Art Nouveau elements but created
an entire building according to the principles of the new style in all its concepts. A
grand bow window on its lower floor decorates the façade. Its wooden frame is marked by characteristic Art Nouveau curved lines. Transparent glass
at its central section is surrounded by designs inspired in nature. Colorful lilies are sprouting
from the blue of water while the upper part is dominated by a bird set against
the blue sky.
Bow window in Rue Darwin 15
Maison Autrique
Victor Horta built his first house with clear ideas about the new style already in 1893, in Chaussee de Haecht 266. He opted for a relatively simple interior, due to financial restrictions of the owner, but applied already basic concepts of the new style like the harmonious combination of industrial and handmade materials or in nature inspired elements as the stair landing.
Two stained glass windows in the staircase flood the house with light. Their design show influences of japonism, a style emerging in Europe in the 19th century and very appreciated by Art Nouveau designers. The window presented here is the lower one of the two, facing the garden. Its subject is a stylized landscape with lys flowers and a fruit tree. The glass artist chose soft pastel colors for the design but enhanced the tree with a deep brown tonality. Opalesque glass with marble effect for the fruits complete this artistic panel.
Victor Horta built his first house with clear ideas about the new style already in 1893, in Chaussee de Haecht 266. He opted for a relatively simple interior, due to financial restrictions of the owner, but applied already basic concepts of the new style like the harmonious combination of industrial and handmade materials or in nature inspired elements as the stair landing.
Two stained glass windows in the staircase flood the house with light. Their design show influences of japonism, a style emerging in Europe in the 19th century and very appreciated by Art Nouveau designers. The window presented here is the lower one of the two, facing the garden. Its subject is a stylized landscape with lys flowers and a fruit tree. The glass artist chose soft pastel colors for the design but enhanced the tree with a deep brown tonality. Opalesque glass with marble effect for the fruits complete this artistic panel.
Staircase window in Maison Autrique
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