Forty-four works in glass by renowned Italian architect Carlo Scarpa-created during his 15-year collaboration with Venini Glassworks in Venice between 1932 and 1947-have been donated by Dr. David Landau and his wife Marie-Rose Kahane to The Metropolitan Museum of Art, where they will join the collection of the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art. All of the works were on view recently at the Museum in the exhibitionVenetian Glass by Carlo Scarpa: The Venini Company, 1932-1947.
"This prescient gift from David Landau and Marie-Rose Kahane comes at a critical moment in the Met's history, as we are reinvigorating our commitment to modern architecture and design," said Thomas P. Campbell, the Museum's Director and CEO. "We are extremely grateful for these pioneering works that represent the breadth of Scarpa's radical experimentation in glass and that redefined an ancient tradition for the modern world.""Every piece in this extraordinary gift is an outstanding example of Scarpa's artistry. Together, these works represent the full sweep of his oeuvre in glass," said Sheena Wagstaff, the Museum's Leonard A. Lauder Chairman of Modern and Contemporary Art. "From the incandescence of a wafer-thin vessel tinged with blue-or a vase in which bubbles of air are suspended in translucent glass that glimmers in the light from tiny fragments of gold leaf-this remarkable donation from Dr. Landau and Ms. Kahane is a dazzling and deeply generous gesture. It will have a transformative impact on our holdings of 20th-century glass and design, and will form important links to the Met's Greek, Roman, Asian, and European holdings, to whose lineage Scarpa pays shimmering homage."Videos