Tall vase made of colorless, whitish, slightly clouded, bubbled glass with colored thread inlays in red, orange and blue, solid round base with brown-violet, partially greenish speckled overlay, club-shaped body, oval-shaped in the upper area, wall with flat melted vertical threads, a decorationof blue, violet, yellow, orange and brown-violet flowers and buds of the autumn crocus, the individual petals with yellow stamens finely cut, polished base with a sanded tear, inscribed on the lower wall: Gallé , incised and partly covered in brown, surface of the wall partly fire-polished, matted inner wall, warmed vase edge.Vase is in intact condition.Èmile Charles Gallé, Nancy around 1898. Height: approx. 37.8 cm, diameter below: approx. 10.3 cm.The intarsia glass is made using the marquetry technique, which is manufactured in several steps. Prefabricated and heated glass decorative parts are applied to the glowing glass bubble and further processed.The most difficult technique at Galle was patented in 1898.Lit: Hilschenz-Mlynek/H.Ricke, Glass - Historicism, Art Nouveau, Art Deco, Stuttgart 1985, p. 203, Fig. 248. ----------------------------------------------- Collection (no shipping