Maker
- - February 10, 2026
Gustave Reynaud’s ceramics occupy a distinctive place within mid-century French design — quietly confident, materially rich, and enduringly relevant. His work is defined not by excess or ornament, but by balance: proportion held in tension with surface, structure softened by glaze. Decades later, his vessels continue to resonate for their sculptural presence and restrained beauty, embodying a philosophy of...
Gustave Reynaud’s ceramics occupy a distinctive place within mid-century French design — quietly confident, materially rich, and enduringly relevant. His work is defined not by excess or ornament, but by balance: proportion held in tension with surface, structure softened by glaze. Decades later, his vessels continue to resonate for their sculptural presence and restrained beauty, embodying a philosophy of craft that feels both grounded and timeless.
A Life in Clay
Gustave Reynaud (1915–1972) was a French ceramicist whose work reflects the disciplined elegance of mid-century studio pottery. Working during a period of renewed interest in artisanal craft, Reynaud devoted himself to refining traditional...
- - January 04, 2026
Few objects capture light with the same poetry as Murano glass. At once delicate and assured, these pieces are the result of centuries of experimentation, restraint, and mastery—crafted on a small cluster of islands in the Venetian lagoon, where glassmaking became both an art form and a guarded legacy.
An Island Devoted to Craft
Murano’s rise as a glassmaking center dates to the late 13th century, when Venetian...
Few objects capture light with the same poetry as Murano glass. At once delicate and assured, these pieces are the result of centuries of experimentation, restraint, and mastery—crafted on a small cluster of islands in the Venetian lagoon, where glassmaking became both an art form and a guarded legacy.
An Island Devoted to Craft
Murano’s rise as a glassmaking center dates to the late 13th century, when Venetian authorities moved furnaces from the city to the islands to reduce the risk of fire and to protect closely held techniques. What followed was an extraordinary concentration of knowledge. Glassmakers refined their methods over generations, developing innovations that would influence decorative...










