Glass paste soliflore vase, decorated in violet color released with acid from the leaves of bindweed hedges, signed Val Saint-Lambert, Art Nouveau period late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
This vase is in good condition. Signed at the tip on the side.
A note: the interior is a little dirty, micro-scratches and wear of time, see photos.
* The Val-Saint-Lambert crystal works were created in 1826 on the site of a former abbey in Seraing, near Liège, in Belgium. World-renowned, they experienced intense and high-quality production. While in France, and particularly in Lorraine, the world of glassmaking is undergoing many stylistic and technical changes, thanks to the impetus of artists like Émile Gallé, prestigious artists work in Val-Saint-Lambert. Gustave Serrurier-Bovy created a few pieces, in which crystal and brass were combined, while from 1906 to 1907, the Müller brothers, who were apprentices in Gallé's workshop, produced many pieces whose decorations were worked on hydrofluoric acid.