“Murano Illuminates the World”

The walkway beneath the Procuratie Vecchie on the north side of Piazza San Marco is looking kind of edgy.  One does not award points for this kind of work but if it were a sport they all deserve the maximum for “execution.”  “Style,” on the other hand, remains in the eye of the beholder.  As it should.

Last November 22 the passageway under the Procuratie Vecchie at the Piazza San Marco lit up with 12 glowing glass chandeliers.  Yes, I’m very late to this subject, but I do not go to the Piazza every day, nor do I subscribe to the “Murano Glass Daily Astonisher” (totally made up).

Late as I may be, the lamps will be shining until March 1, so there is still time to see them if you’re in the neighborhood.

This year is the third edition of an annual invitation-only exhibition, “Murano Illuminates the World,” to showcase the collaboration of international glass masters with Muranese “furnaces” who were given the assignment “chandeliers.”

I admire the technical and creative talent that the artist and glassmaster displayed in this extraordinary collaboration.  As for the appeal of any individual piece, opinions will certainly be respected.  The mystical meaning of each work is elucidated in the excellent report from “Venezia Today” online (translated by me).

Inside/Outside
Ru Xiao Fan, with Effetre and Seguso Gianni.  A birdcage complete with birds, in and out.  “The work reflects the choice between security and liberty, and evokes the myth of Eden and the ‘invisible cages’ of the present.  To leave the illusion of protection requires courage, but only he who risks can discover the true significance of flight.”   

Life’s Meaning
The Abate Zanetti school, with master Eros Raffael.  A group work born of the creativity of the young glassmasters.  “The chandeliers’ leaves decorated in various shades of blue filaments symbolize the cycle of life.  The leaves recall water, the origin of every form, and by their harmonious movement speak of time, the transformation and the eternal continuity of existence.” 

Musica Angelica (Angelic Music)
Lucio Bubacco, with Vetreria 3 Artistico Lampadari. “A scenographic composition with an ensemble of angels that play classical instruments.  The chandeleier is made of 30 arms and the light they carry becomes the atmosphere that surrounds the angelic figures.”

Pool of Light
F. Taylor Colantonio with Signoretto Lampadari in collaboration with Calvadore.  “Has drawn inspiration from the designs in the archive of the Study Center of Glass of the Giorgio Cini Foundation on the island of San Giorgio Maggiore, and from the ceiling of the railway station of Santa Lucia.  The Pool of Light imagines a ray of sunshine that filters through a swirling current of the lagoon.” 

Because it’s impossible to show all the chandeliers in one photo, I divided the walkway into thirds.  This is the middle section.
Primavera d’Oriente  (Eastern Spring)
Simone Crestani, with Berengo Studio. “A chandelier inspired by models from the Twenties, where a flowering branch in borosilicate (silica and boron trioxide) glass, studded with pink buds, crosses and unbalances the linear structure in smooth glass to then recompose in a poetic equilibrium, combining geometry and naturalism.” 

A closer look at those beautiful buds.
Cuore Infinito (Infinite Heart)
Joana Vasconcelos, with Berengo Studio, “transforms the chandelier into a pulsating organism… a luminous heart that vibrates with light and color, a monumental symbol of passione, resilience and transformation.  The form, suspended between tension and harmony, reinterprets a domestic object into an emotional and universal icon.”
Things appear to be calming down in this stretch.  No more pulsating organisms.
The Observatory
Irene Cattaneo, with Lavorazioni artistiche of Fabiano Amadi.  “With its eight handmade “moonlike” spheres, the chandelier is homage to the glassmaking master of Murano, where the classic technique of the submerged entanglement is expertly fused with the use of metallic powder to create a luminous and profound effect.”

Trama di Luce (Weave of Light)
Michela Cattai, with Simone Cenedese.  “It takes shape from the observation of the rhythms of the tides and the geometry of the islands of the lagoon by Murano, elements that define a fragile equilibrium and in continuous flux.”

This is what the chandelier looks like when it gets up in the morning.  “We must not let daylight in upon the magic” is the famous warning about British royalty that comes to mind.  You mean that extraordinary lamp looks like any old ordinary lightbulb in during the day? (from VeneziaToday, not credited)
The final section of the line-up.
Calamaro (Squid)
Massimo Micheluzzi, with Vetreria Anfora. “A chandelier in an organic form that evokes marine tentacles.  The glass shapes the fluid movement of the water and the Venetian lagoon, transforming the chandelier into a creature that is poetic and alive, mirroring the material that breathes with the territory.”
Profilo  (Profile)
Luca Nichetto, with Barovier & Toso, blends craftsmanship and technology in “A work that reinterprets in a contemporary key the silhouette of the classic chandelier, composed of 34 disks in centrifuged glass. Each disk conserves in the glass a delicate spiral motif, a trace of the gesture of the artisan.  The light diffused by a central axis unites the forms in a hamonic dialogue between past and future, where centuries-old techniques meet innovative design.”
Nature Rebirth
Christian Pellizzari, with Salviati.  “A suspended work composed of blown “eggs” and tentacles made with the technique of the ‘compasses’ of the Rezzonico chandeliers.  The ancient material dialogues with an innovative system of micro-LED, celebrating the continuous rebirth of nature through light, fragility and strength.”

Acqua Rings
Chahan Minassian, with Nicola Moretti Murano, “reinterprets one of his iconic designs: overlapping disks of glass dance in a tonality inspired by the Venetian lagoon, composing a chandelier that is minimalist but vibrant, where the circular movement evokes the fluidity and reflections of water.”

 

You may also like

4 Comments

  1. thanks so much… musica angelica is lovely. i so enjoy your comments and insights… almost as good as being there!

  2. Such a lovely post dear Erla, thank you for sharing to those of us that can’t be there. Hope you are well.
    Jean

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *