Renaissance Replica

Mitchell OwensArt

Sent unexpectedly by a friend, a cobalt-blue footed cup holds a backstory steeped in Italian Renaissance history.

Three views of the author’s cobalt glass footed bowl, in the style of the Barovier drinking cup, c. late 1800s. Photographs by Matthew Zwissler.

One Christmas, a few years ago, Alex Papachristidis sent me a bowl with a footed base, a sort of a goblet of cobalt-blue glass. “I don’t know what it is, but I saw it and thought of you,” said the ebullient Manhattan-based interior decorator, with whom I wrote a book called The Elegant Life: Rooms That Welcome and Inspire (Rizzoli, 2022). He had pulled it out of storage, packed it safely, and sent it on its merry way. A few clicks later—thank God for Google—I discovered that Papachristidis had given me a relatively small Renaissance revival vessel, likely late nineteenth century, a copy of the famous fifteenth-century Barovier drinking cup (once a star of Moonraker, the 1979 James Bond flick, but that’s another story). The original cup is displayed at the Museo del Vetro on Venice’s fabled island of Murano. Another friend, a dealer, admires that repository greatly, and he has sent me photographs of its beautiful contents, among them a large centerpiece made in the form of a garden. The bowl, though smaller, is decorated, like the original, with gilding and hand-painted enamelwork, the pictures depicting a serious couple—marriage is a solemn business, after all, though the bride wears a hat with what appear to be long pointed ears—as well as allegorical scenes meant to offer edifying relationship lessons. (My favorite scene depicts bare-breasted bathers splashing in the fountain of youth, beneath a columnar water source, a candy-striped column that resembles a barber’s pole.) Reproductions have been made forever. They still are today, because Barovier & Toso, a descendant of the long-ago firm, makes it and variations in the same furnace. Antique and vintage examples are widely available, easily found at auction houses, souvenir shops, online, et cetera, but no altar-bound pair that I know actually uses one. So for me and my husband, when the Barovier reproduction isn’t sitting on a chimney piece, it holds Pepperidge Farm cheddar-cheese goldfish quite nicely.

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