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Roman Mosaic and Network Glass

Despite the labor-intensive nature of the process, cast mosaic bowls were extremely popular and foreshadowed the appeal that blown glass was to have in Roman society.
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Glass mosaic jar, Glass, Greek, probably Eastern Mediterranean
Greek, probably Eastern Mediterranean
2nd–early 1st century BCE
Glass network mosaic bowl with base ring, Glass, Greek, Eastern Mediterranean
Greek, Eastern Mediterranean
1st century BCE
Glass network mosaic bowl with base ring, Glass, Greek, Eastern Mediterranean
Greek, Eastern Mediterranean
mid-1st century BCE
Glass mosaic dish, Glass, Roman
Roman
late 1st century BCE–early 1st century CE
Glass garland bowl, Glass, Roman
Roman
late 1st century BCE
Glass ribbed bowl, Glass, Roman
Roman
1st century CE

Among the first glasswares to appear in significant numbers on Roman sites in Italy are the immediately recognizable and brilliantly colored mosaic glass bowls, dishes, and cups of the late first century B.C. The manufacturing processes for these objects came to Italy with Hellenistic craftsmen from the eastern Mediterranean, and these objects retain stylistic similarities with their Hellenistic counterparts.

Mosaic glass objects were manufactured using a laborious and time-consuming technique. Multicolored canes of mosaic glass were created, then stretched to shrink the patterns and either cut across into small, circular pieces or lengthwise into strips. These were placed together to form a flat circle, heated until they fused, and the resulting disk was then sagged over or into a mold to give the object its shape. Almost all cast objects required polishing on their edges and interiors to smooth the imperfections caused by the manufacturing process; the exteriors usually did not require further polishing because the heat of the annealing furnace would create a shiny, “fire polished” surface. Despite the labor-intensive nature of the process, cast mosaic bowls were extremely popular and foreshadowed the appeal that blown glass was to have in Roman society.


Contributors

Rosemarie Trentinella
Department of Greek and Roman Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

October 2003


Further Reading

Oliver, Andrew, Jr. "Late Hellenistic Glass in the Metropolitan Museum." Journal of Glass Studies 9 (1967), pp. 13–33.

Oliver, Andrew, Jr. "Millefiori Glass in Classical Antiquity." Journal of Glass Studies 10 (1968), pp. 48–70.


Citation

View Citations

Trentinella, Rosemarie. “Roman Mosaic and Network Glass.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/rmos/hd_rmos.htm (October 2003)