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Battuto 2002
Sculptures by Monica Guggisberg and Philip Baldwin
Exhibition catalogue February 16th – June 23rd 2002
Glasmuseet Ebeltoft Danmark
Battuto! Battuta!
Battuto. Adjective. Having undergone a series of strikes
inflicted by an apposite tool, for a specific use or as a technique
of fabrication.
Battuta. Noun. In Music, originally the beat of a baton,
foot, or hands, by the director of a choir to set the tempo for the
singers. (1)
The Italian verb, battere, the action of repeated strokes, is used
in so many ways—as surface decoration, as a technique for working
metal, as a marker of rhythm, as an indicator of life in heartbeat
or pulse rate, as a marker of continuous striving, as a description
of a good dunning, or as a gauge of approval in applause. How appropriate
that one of its derivatives is the title of this show. Monica Guggisberg
and Philip Baldwin’s work embodies so many of its elusive and
seemingly contradictory connotations that rather than just describing
a technique for working glass “battuto” signifies a way
of being, a way of breathing, and expresses the beat of life.
Guggisberg and Baldwin have been working glass together for over twenty
years. Form and line have been the bedrock of their work from the
beginning. Their heroes were those masters of twentieth century glass—Kaj
Frank, Alvar Aalto, Paolo Venini, Carlo Scarpa, Tapio Wirkkala—whose
works manifest the designer’s goal of technical competence,
aesthetic freshness and design as art. The hallmark of the “classic”
is a perennial vitality and universality, which is embedded in form:
the elusiveness of the essential is evidenced in its rarity. Throughout
their collaboration Guggisberg and Baldwin have sought the clear line,
in purity of shape and its ability to articulate and communicate value
and meaning. Their choice of glass as an expressive medium was not
haphazard: glass is perhaps the most lucid of materials; and in its
unelaborated transparency the most unremitting in displaying false
conception and bad design.
After completing their training and apprenticeship in Sweden and establishing
their first independent studio in the Swiss hamlet of Nonfoux in 1982,
Guggisberg and Baldwin continued to develop their design and manual
skills, holding fast to the philosophical tenants of chastity as the
underpinning of good design, and meditative repetition as the means
to absorb and internalize the skills necessary to create their seemingly
effort-free basic forms. Unlike so many of the proponents of the studio
glass movement, their devotion to the fundamentals of design and craft
as opposed to the immediate gratification of indulging in superficial
application of newly learned technical tricks as a gloss for personal
expression cannot be overemphasized. These two are mature artists:
they have paid their dues, they have cited their sources, they know
just what they are about, and what they are doing is quietly revolutionary.
In marrying the techniques of “Swedish overlay” and Italian
cold-working, Guggisberg and Baldwin, have shown us all that surface
texture elaboration is more than decoration and embellishment. When,
in 1986, they began to augment their series production with one off
pieces—first plates and then bowls-- with sandblasted patterns
and images revealing colored underlays in the Scandinavian manner
they began to move from the strict tenets of constructivist principles
and Bauhaus influence and their work gradually became more fluid and
organic. By the early 1990’s the artists were well aware of
a need to expand their range of skills to overcome method-conditioned
limitations of the imagination, and they began to experiment with
some Venetian approaches to working glass. The immediate consequence
was the development of more anthropomorphic forms in the precursors
of the cortigiane and guardiani, with cane worked and incalmo heads.
However, the real breakthrough came about when they started working
with the master cold worker, Paolo Ferro of Murano. The softer, more
intricate and immediate textures and surface effects achieved through
Mediterranean hand cutting added the beat, the rhythm, and the work
began to dance.
Although blowing hot glass and working it cold seem to be diametrically
opposed processes, done in the Venetian way they both require the
immediacy of precision and speed that seems to correspond to the very
nature of the material itself. Worked free hand, either hot or cold,
the result is direct, instantaneous, and lasting. Glass is not stone;
even in its solid state it is somehow soft and malleable. It gives
way immediately to the touch of the cutter's stone in the same straight
and true way that a glass bubble responds to a breath of air. And
it is just this sense of the immediate, the captured moment, that
underlies the allure of the best of Italian glass and makes it seem
to live, to breathe.
In a way it’s anomalous that this type of cold working, battuto,
is so closely identified with Murano. The entire Venetian glass aesthetic
does rest on the immediacy of free hand , hot forming. No matter how
much time and preparation a piece needs beforehand (and mosaic glass
and murrine do require both), once the piece enters the annealer it
is finished. Oh, perhaps a bit of grinding to smooth out punty marks,
and maybe a bit of polishing, but the elaborate enameling and deep
cutting that characterize Bohemian and English lead crystal have never
made strong inroads on Murano. In fact, most Muranese look askance
at all surface treatment, be it gold leaf, scavo, sandblasting, or
what have you. The immediate assumption is that there was something
wrong with the batch that day and that the finishing is just a way
of recuperating what would otherwise be a lost day of production.
Yet battuto, inciso, vellato, are all terms that epitomize twentieth
century Venetian glass and are virtually synonymous with the names
Carlo Scarpa and Paolo Venini. How did this come about?
With the re-establishment of the glass industry on the island of Murano
after the Austrians left the Veneto and the region joined the newly
establish kingdom of Italy, there was a conscious effort on the part
of Muranese glass houses to rediscover lost glass making techniques,
especially those that characterized Roman glass. Among the archeological
finds were cane-worked and murrine vessels and anforas decorated with
fine, regular incised lines. The problem with working with glass tissues,
especially pezzati and murrine was that the finished vessel was often
rough or pitted, and needed to be smoothed out by a fine surface grinding,
a process which, when left unpolished, gave the piece a matte luster
which came to be called vellato, and was in common use from the 1880’s
onward.
Battuto itself, as a surface finishing technique that imitates
the “distressed” effect of hammered metal was introduced
to Murano by Venini &C. after Carlo Scarpa took over as artistic
director in 1933, and works featuring this technique were first shown
in the Venice Biennale in 1938. Anna Venini states that Scarpa was
inspired by the “reappearance” of this technique in French
glass in the 1900’s (2), and vases with “hammered”
cut surface, designed by Romain and Jeanne Gevaert, were in production
at the Belgium glass works, Val Saint-Lambert , in the 1920’s
(3). Although it is likely that battuto was first applied on Murano
in the grand old tradition of surface decoration used to mask imperfections
in the glass, the effect was so successful that Scarpa continued to
develop new applications, and was joined by other Venini designers;
most notably Paolo Venini, Tobia Scarpa, Ludiovico Diaz de Santillana,
and in a series of vases that were more carved than hammered by Miroslav
Hrstka in 1968.
Even given the widespread popularity of the various battuto applications,
use of the technique in production has been confined almost exclusively
to Venini & C. Traditional Muranese resistance to surface elaboration,
and the undeniable expense of reworking the glass cold, checked widespread
commercial adoption. However, especially in recent years, several
independent artists working on Murano and elsewhere have begun to
utilize similar hammering, cutting, and grinding techniques to elaborate
and refine the surface of their one-off works, especially in finishing
cane worked or murrine pieces, or to overcome the shiny glossiness
of glass by reducing distracting reflection to emphasize form and/or
texture. In one way or another most are following the pathway set
by Scarpa and Venini, although often to personal and poetic ends.
Guggisberg and Baldwin have laid a new avenue. By joining Italian
cold working to the Swedish overlay, they have embarked upon an innovative
sequence of experimentation and research not only on surfaces, but
also on color and the interplay of color and texture through surface
treatment. These explorations have increasingly drawn them to probe
the expressive fields of textural elements. Initially soft and tactile,
with the new strong angles, facets, and deep cuts, the surface itself
is taking on a fourth dimension, something sculptural that moves beyond
the limits set by height, width, and volume.
The artists’s rigorous use of almost archetypal vessels, their
elongated, boat-like“sentinels” and gourd like “watchers”,
which have served as fundamental, ego free symbols of awareness, while
still strict in line and form seem to begin to breathe more freely,
to unfold in an evolutionary process of growth and change. Their newer
(from 1996) free standing pieces, Cortigiane and Guardiani , representations
of human vanities and foibles, have begun to dance and, through movement,
to transform into something beyond the anthropomorphic. It’s
as though the work itself is generating change, as when a fictional
character takes on a life of its own and leads the author to unplotted
territory. The years Guggisberg and Baldwin have devoted to seeking
essential forms representative of universal truths has given their
work innate intensity and duration, and their courageous and innovative
surface treatments—the hand cuts, lines, textures, and facets—have
added the beat, the interval that marks the beat that makes being.
The work Monica Guggisberg and Philip Baldwin are presenting in this
collection is tremendously exciting. It throbs to the beat of a universal
heart. Fugue like variations, the ramifications that emerge through
subtle alterations in repetition of a theme, stems from precision
in form and precision in cutting. The artists seem to have captured
some elemental truth of continuty in change, like fractiles and chaos
theory as a foundation of order in cosmic expansion. Through daring
surface elaboration and striking use of color, transparency, and translucency
they are unveiling the fundamental. The work strikes one as evolutionary
in a cosmic, geomorphic, biological sense. Some of the cuts, the rounded
battuto, revealing the transparent glass underneath through irregular
facing intervals of opaque color, recall a moonscape, or the milky
way on a clear northern night, the first living cells developing in
a primordial pond. Others feel like stars shooting out at the birth
of this universe: spiraling ridges, waves on the sea, the living earth,
icebergs and cliff villages, chains of interlocking DNA, mollusk communities
or fossil rocks, life-organic and inorganic-with all its infinite
potential.
Louise Berndt, Venice, November 2001
References Cited:
1. Devoto, Giacomo and Oli, Gian Carlo. Il Dizionario della
Lingua Italiana. Casa Editrice Flce Le Monnier S.p.A., Firenze.
2000. p. 228. (translation by the author)
2. Venini Diaz de Santillana, Anna. Venini: Catalogue Raisonne`
1921-1986. Skira Editore S.p.a. Milano. 2000. p. 309.
3. Jackson, Leslie. 20th Century Factory Glass. Rizzoli
International Publications, Inc. New York. 2000. p. 211.
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