Review by Choice Review
Whitehouse (Corning Museum of Glass) set out to write "a short, readable overview" of the history of glass, presumably for a popular audience. Glass, however, may be too large a subject for such a small book. Whitehouse narrowed the topic by excluding flat glass (but not entirely) and industrial production. He narrowed it yet again by including only "images of rare and beautiful" glass from the British Museum and Corning. But viewing the history of glass through an art museum lens yields a selective and misleading account. The book, particularly the earlier sections, has strengths. Whitehouse is an authoritative guide to glass before the Renaissance and capably instructs through image and text. But the last third of the book goes awry. The author seems to lose his way in a maze of names, dates, and biographies. The positive image-to-word ratio disappears; four pages on Swedish, Finnish, Danish, and Italian glass of the early 20th century, for instance, discuss two dozen practitioners but offer no related images. Glass is handsome, the objects beautiful, and the photography excellent, but the narrative unfortunately degenerates from informative commentary on objects to underillustrated enumeration of movements, makers, and designers. Summing Up: Optional. General readers. K. L. Ames Bard Graduate Center
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Despite the ubiquity of glass objects in our lives, "it is difficult to identify a book that provides a short, readable, overview" of the subject, argues Whitehouse (Roman Glass in the Corning Museum of Glass), senior scholar at the Corning Museum of Glass. Although this is not the most scintillating text, it does the job, while full-color photographs represent beautiful examples of glass objects from around the world. The discovery of glassblowing by the ancient Romans revolutionized production, but techniques of molding, casting, and core-forming glass produced unusual results, such as dimpled tableware of the fifth-century Achaemenids or slumped glass artwork from the 20th century. Glass decorating techniques distinguished glassworkers in the Hellenistic Mediterranean, who used multiple methods to create glass tableware, and also early-modern European glass etchers. Photo captions provide insight into how glassworkers made both the everyday and the extraordinary, from an Iranian molded tumbler to a pitcher cut with delicate green lines. Whitehouse concludes by remarking on the growth of glass as a medium for art and collectibles, and this book will certainly be welcomed by visitors to museums and galleries. Three pages of glossary and further reading round out this succinct presentation of a versatile medium for the utilitarian, decorative, and artistic. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Whitehouse (senior scholar, Corning Museum of Glass) has compiled an informative history of the creation and use of glass. People have been making glass for over 4000 years, and Whitehouse traces its history from its rough beginnings to the discovery of glassblowing to its rise as an art form. The text is beautifully illustrated with 130 color images of glass from ancient to modern times, drawn from the British Museum and the Corning Museum of Glass collections. Previous works, such as Alan Macfarlane and Gerry Martin's Glass: A World History, focus on the cultural impact of glass and glassmaking; this book traces glassmaking from its beginnings to the present, touching on its global spread in the first century B.C.E. and centuries of innovations in craft and changes in style. A glossary and index complete this well-thought-out book. VERDICT A beautifully illustrated history of glass for those interested in knowing how glassmaking began and how it became the art form it is today. Recommended.-Sandy Knowles, South Carolina State Lib., Columbia (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.