Gemmail

Gemmail (French, plural gemmaux) describes a type of stained glass art developed during the 1930s by French painter Jean Crotti. Translated from French, the word literally means “enamel gem.”[1] It differs from traditional stained glass techniques in that the individual pieces of colored glass are not joined by lead came, but overlapped and glued together with a clear substance. Pablo Picasso is said to have hailed gemmail as a new art form. Inside the Basilica of St. Pius X in Lourdes, Bernadette Soubirous's "Way of Light", based on sketches by René Margotton, depicts the eighteen apparitions together with scenes from her life.[2]

Notes

  1. Elliott, Kelley. "A Brief History of Gemmaux". Corning Museum of Glass. Corning Museum of Glass. Retrieved 13 November 2014.
  2. "Art: A New Art",Time, 1957.
gollark: The worst I've seen happen to a TV was when someone shot it with a toy archery set and cracked the screen.
gollark: I would have preferred... not an Arduino Nano... but there weren't any.
gollark: We have implemented a fix for this, i.e. offloading all motor control to a spare Arduino Nano.
gollark: No, it just suddenly stopped working after being connected wrong.
gollark: Use parser combinators obviously*.

References


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