Glass Vase “Propeller” – Jan Kotík for Beránek (Škrdlovice) Glassworks, ca. 1958–1962

Glass Vase “Propeller” – Jan Kotík for Beránek (Škrdlovice) Glassworks, ca. 1958–1962

€499,00
Sale price  €499,00 Regular price 
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Glass Vase “Propeller” – Jan Kotík for Beránek (Škrdlovice) Glassworks, ca. 1958–1962

Glass Vase “Propeller” – Jan Kotík for Beránek (Škrdlovice) Glassworks, ca. 1958–1962

€499,00
Sale price  €499,00 Regular price 

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Heavy free-formed uranium glass vase by Czech artist Jan Kotík for Beránek Glassworks, with a dynamic propeller-like body, trapped air bubbles and sommerso layering that shift from chartreuse to blue-green depending on the light. A classic example of Czech mid-century organic glass that glows vividly under UV and reads like frozen motion in daylight.

  • Dimensions: H 20 cm, Dia 12 cm
  • Material: Uranium glass, hot-worked free-form
  • Brand: Beránek Glassworks (also known as Škrdlovice)
  • Designer: Jan Kotík
  • Color: Transparent yellow-green uranium glass with teal/icy-blue nuances
  • Condition: Excellent vintage condition; no chips or cracks, minimal wear to base from age
  • Era: ca. 1958–1962, Mid-Century Modern
  • Origin: Czechoslovakia
  • Remarks: Approx. 2,5 kg; glows under UV light

A statement piece for a sideboard, low cabinet or plinth where it won’t have to compete: let it sit near a window or soft spotlight so the colour can deepen through the day. Pair it with just a couple of quiet companions – a stack of design books or a simple ceramic bowl – and skip the flowers entirely; the flowing glass, air bubbles and shifting greens are already the main event.

Jan Kotik (1916–2002) was a Czech painter, printmaker, industrial designer, and art theorist- co-founder of the post-war avant-garde Skupina 42 (Group 42) and, from 1950–53, head of an atelier at ÚLUV, the state design center. His applied-arts work included influential hot-shop glass for the Škrdlovice/Baranek glassworks, notably the “Propeller” (model 5503) vase designed in 1955 and produced into the 1960s. Kotík also earned international recognition with a silver medal at Expo ’58 in Brussels for glass, later settling in Berlin in 1970, where he continued exhibiting and writing until his death in 2002.

Baranek Glassworks better known by its post-war name Škrdlovicewas founded in 1940-41 by master glassmaker Emanuel Beránek and his brothers in the village of Škrdlovice (Vysočina, Czechoslovakia), quickly gaining a reputation for heavy, hand-formed “hutní” art glass with rich colors, bubbles, and layered effects. Nationalized after 1948, the factory operated within the state design system and collaborated with leading artists; highlights include Jan Kotík’s celebrated “Propeller” vases (designed 1955, executed in the Škrdlovice hot shop) and limited hot-worked series by František Vízner, among others. After restitution in 1992 the works returned to the family under Vlastimil Beránek, continuing hand-made production until its closure in 2008; today, Škrdlovice’s output is recognized as a cornerstone of 20th-century Czech studio glass and remains highly collectible.

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