Overview
The vase exhibits the 'bullicante' (controlled bubble) technique and a free-form pulled rim, characteristic of mid-century Murano art glass. The clear glass base is also typical of this style.
Identification
Photo reference
1 uploaded photo
Overview
The vase exhibits the 'bullicante' (controlled bubble) technique and a free-form pulled rim, characteristic of mid-century Murano art glass. The clear glass base is also typical of this style.
Story
The 'bullicante' technique (controlled bubbles injected into the glass) is a hallmark of mid-century Italian glassmaking, famously perfected on the island of Murano. During the 1950s-1970s, massive quantities of this glass were exported worldwide. Without a signature or original foil label, this piece is classified as 'Murano-style,' which could originate from a lesser-known Italian furnace or be a mid-century import from another region mimicking the style.
Maker / Origin
Unattributed
Condition & Value
Based on the single provided photo, the vase appears visually intact with no obvious major breaks or structural damage visible from the primary angle. However, the condition of the pulled rim, the interior (regarding potential water staining), and the base edge cannot be confirmed.
Full Research
Sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance pulled from recent auction results.
Mid-century Murano and Murano-style art glass remains popular for interior decor, particularly in vibrant colors like amber. However, the market is highly bifurcated: signed or documented pieces by top designers command strong premiums, while unmarked export pieces or generic 'Murano-style' glass trade as decorative commodities. Buyers for unmarked pieces are typically decorating rather than collecting, making them price-sensitive and heavily reliant on size and visual impact.
▲ Classic mid-century modern aesthetic with popular amber coloring
▲ Bullicante (controlled bubble) technique provides strong visual texture and decorative appeal
▲ Free-form pulled rim adds organic, sculptural interest typical of the era
▼ Unverified base finish — a rough or absent pontil mark would confirm mass-market export origin, capping value
▼ Unknown dimensions — a height under 8 inches would anchor the piece to the lowest end of the estimate
▼ Unverified rim and interior condition — hidden flea bites or cloudy water staining would heavily discount the piece
Best Venue
List the vase on a broad secondary marketplace like eBay or Etsy, where decorative mid-century glass performs reliably. Before listing, measure the exact height and weight, and take clear photos of the base (to show the pontil finish) and the rim to reassure buyers of its condition.
Upside Potential
If the vase is exceptionally large (over 12 inches) and heavy, or if a close inspection of the base reveals a highly polished pontil and a faint acid-etched signature (e.g., Seguso), the value could shift toward the $150-$250 retail tier seen in the Whoppah and Chairish comps.
Also found — market-range context
Surfaced during research but not used to anchor the valuation — wrong form, species, era, or no published price. Shown so the market range around this item is visible.