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Lalique China Mood Collection
Listing of the China Mood collection, inspired by precious fans, lanterns and forests of stylized bamboos by Lalique...
   

Middle Empire...Forbidden City...Silk Road...Traditional China is gifted with a soul which has always enchanted our readings and daydreams. A soul that a few objects can revive...China Mood drew its inspiration from Chinese Arts vital energy and from history, when in 1929, Rene Lalique decorated the Peace Hotel, Art Deco wonder in Shangai.

The collection tells stories from immemorial times through creations of timeless modernity. Echoing an old enchantment, their motifs are an invitation to travel to the heart of Asia. Inspired by precious fans, lanterns and forests of stylized bamboos, they will take you to a fantastic universe filled with celestial dragons and toward Lijiang - old city of the Yunnan province, whose name means "beauty of the lake".

Combining design and crystal, the touch of a contemporary artist stimulates tradition. Thus, each creation reinterprets the codes, ancestral symbols, thousand-year-old heritage of Far East. The purity of crystal and virtuosity of glass-masters offer a revealing insight into the core spirit of Lalique.

 

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HISTORY OF RENE LALIQUE GLASS
René Lalique became synonymous with French Art Nouveau decorative arts. René Lalique was born in 1860 and first began designing fine jewelry in Paris in 1881. Lalique pursued increasingly more innovative experimentation in glass commencing around 1883. Early works used the familiar "lost wax" technique by which the model is made in wax while a mold is formed around the model. Then, the wax is melted and molten glass is poured into the mold. Lalique glass was made in this manner until approximately 1905 at which time the factory was redesigned for a larger production.

As such, the individual uniqueness of each example of Lalique glass came to an end with the end of the one-time only molding technique around wax models. The success of this venture resulted in the opening of his own glassworks at Combs-la-Ville in 1909. During the art nouveau period, Lalique was well known for a wide variety of objects including perfume bottles, vases, inkwells, decorative boxes, and bookends. In 1921 a larger factory was established at Wingen-sur-Moder in Alsace-Lorraine. By the '30s Lalique was world renowned as the most important designer of his time.

Lalique glass is lead based, either mold blown or pressed. Favored motifs during the Art Nouveau period were dancing nymphs, fish, dragonflies, and foliage. Characteristically the glass is crystal in combination with acid-etched relief. Later some items were made in as many as ten colors (red, amber, and green among them) and were occasionally accented with enameling. These colored pieces, especially those in, black, are highly prized by advanced collectors.

During the '20s and '30s, Lalique designed several vases and bowls reminiscent of American Indian art. He also developed a line in the Art Deco style decorated with stylized birds, florals, and geometries. In addition to vases, clocks, automobile mascots, stemware, and bottles, many other useful objects were produced. While not well known, Lalique also experimented with bronze and other materials as well. Most glass was clear or opalescent glass and signed via engraving or in the mold "R. Lalique".

The R. Lalique signature was only used until 1945 with the death of René. At that time, René Lalique's son Marc took over the company. Production of many pieces produced prior to 1945 ceased following René's death although some are still in production albeit with a different marking. The firm is still in operation today.

 

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