The Story
Behind the "Thorne Vase"
By Dick Thorne
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Sometimes
it is better to be lucky than to be good. That
was clearly the situation behind the acquisition
of the so-called “Thorne Vase” (as named by
David Doty).
My wife, Barbara, was an antique dealer for many
years. One way to spend quality time together
was to attend auctions together, and we attended
a lot of them during the 1980s (part of that
story was told in “Antique Buying, the Wholesale
Myth”, Glass Collector’s Digest,
October/November, 1987). We were attending an
auction at the Pacific Galleries in downtown
Seattle one evening in 1986 when a lot of three
carnival glass pieces came up: a large marigold
bowl with a fleur de lis pattern and two
identical marigold 8 inch vases with a large
diamond-in-circle pattern. Both patterns were
very heavy, high quality glass. We had started
collecting carnival glass, primarily Dragon &
Lotus (that story was told in “Carnival Glass,
the Anatomy of a Collectible”, Glass Collector’s
Digest February/March, 1988). However, we could
not identify either pattern, other than probable
European origin (Pacific Galleries imported many
lots from Europe). We risked a grand total of
$45 on the lot and were successful.
Over
the next few years, we tried to identify the
pieces. We showed them to other collectors. We
even took them to a glass convention and showed
them to Frank Fenton. No one could identify
them.
Finally, well over a decade later, we took them
to the International Carnival Glass Convention
in 1999 and showed them to Glen Thistlewood.
Glen identified the bowl as Fleur De Lis by
Inwald, Czechoslovakia. Several other pieces of
this pattern have been found subsequently,
including bowls, vases, plates and pitchers.
However, to my knowledge, the bowl we acquired
remains the only known example of the Master
Bowl.
The vase was more challenging. Initially, Glen
thought the manufacturer might be Rindskopf,
Czechoslovakia, and David Doty notes two
examples of a 6 inch version of the vase that
were sold in 1999 and 2001. However, recently,
Glen discovered the pattern in a Walther-Sacksenglass
catalog, where it was named “Luttich.” An
example of the 8 inch vase was sold on eBay last
March by a seller from the Netherlands. I
corresponded with the seller, an experienced
glass dealer, and he has seen four examples,
three in France and one in Belgium.
A couple of years after we acquired the pair, we
sold one of them for $30 at an antique show in
Seattle. So we got most of our investment back,
and there is one more out there somewhere,
probably still in the Seattle area. |
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