Four Seasons set
The first vases of the Four Seasons collection were blown at the glassworks as early as 1998 and the author Jiří Šuhájek himself participated in its patterning at the glass furnace. As many as eleven pairs of hands are involved in the creation of one vase. The elegant rounded lines of the vases contrast impressively with the masterfully cut edges. The vases from the Four Seasons collection will become a designer home accessory and a wedding gift that will be a lasting reminder of this precious occasion.
The set includes two vases of the same colours in sizes 16 and 19 cm (height).
- Size no size
- Height no size
- Manufactured since 2000
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Design and production
When opal flatters the crystal
The collection’s author Jiří Šuhájek is able to not only design his artworks, but also manufacture them, which shows the breadth of his talent. So it’s no surprise that this acclaimed artist and painter has received many awards at home and abroad. He graduated from Prague’s UMPRUM and London’s Royal College of Art and between 1972 and 1978, he worked as staff artist at Moser glassworks.
The glass of the modern, minimalist vases is coloured in tones inspired by the colour tones of individual seasons, the clear crystal or characteristic Moser colours meeting opal in one of four tones (jade green, white, yellow, orange). The vases also impress with their contrasting shapes: while the curves created by the glassworker’s breath dominate the inside, the outside is formed by sharp edges, a product of masterly glasscutting.
- Hand-blown from environmentally friendly lead-free crystal
- Hand-cut and polished to a high gloss
- Made using the glass underlay technique
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Designer
Jiri Suhajek
He was taught by Professor Stanislav Libenský at Prague’s UMPRUM and graduated from the Royal College of Art. Between 1972 and 1978, he worked at the Moser glassworks as an artist, and created several unique designer collections for the company. He has received many awards at home and abroad for both his designs and his artistic work. His works can be found in collections in some of the world’s most prominent museums, among them the Corning Museum of Glass in New York and London’s Victoria and Albert Museum.