Bernard Perrot Perfume Bottle
Artist: Bernard Perrot
Moulded blown brown glass flacon, flattened pear shape, with small foot and pewter screw cap. Decorated on one side with three fleur-de-lys surmounted by a crown, and on the other with three hearts and a floral motif. Made circa 1690 in the Orleans glassworks of Bernard Perrot, active from 1649 to 1709. Descended from an Italian family of glassmakers who probably arrived in France following Louis de Gonzague, this flask illustrates one of his inventions: the use of molds with recessed decoration to cast molten glass into small flasks, goblets, medallions and vials, revealing the motifs in relief. Perrot specialized in colored glass, producing agate-paste glass, porcelain imitations in white glass and transparent red glass. The stopper is missing, which is quite common for pieces from this period.
This glass-blown molded object from Orléans represents the very first mass-produced glass perfume bottles, the trigger being the emerging bourgeoisie's demand for perfume, which was no longer the preserve of the nobility.
Please visit our website orchardantiques.com
This glass-blown molded object from Orléans represents the very first mass-produced glass perfume bottles, the trigger being the emerging bourgeoisie's demand for perfume, which was no longer the preserve of the nobility.
Please visit our website orchardantiques.com
995 €
Period: 17th century
Style: Louis 14th, Regency
Condition: Good condition
Material: Glass
Width: 4.7cm
Height: 8.8cm
Depth: 1.5cm
Reference (ID): 1762707
Availability: In stock
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