Muranese glassware in the Portuguese Royal House
The royal couple
Shortly before the unification of Italy in 1866, Princess Maria Pia of Savoy (1847-1911), daughter of King Victor Emmanuel II of Italy, married King Luís I of Portugal (1847-1911), and occupied her new royal residence in 1862.
This painting of Queen Maria Pia's arrival in Lisbon in 1862 the day before her wedding, bears witness to the importance of this marriage...
...on the ship transporting the queen, the corvette Bartolomeu Dias the flags of Portugal and Italy were raised.
The event drew thousands of on-lookers and Lisbon society.
In the background the National Palace of Ajuda the future home of Queen Maria Pia of Savoy.
Settling into the palace life
As soon as the Queen started living in the Ajuda National Palace, she undertook a series of interior decoration and renovation works. Strongly influenced by the french taste, chiefly by Napoleon III, she envisioned new eclectic setups, especially adopting the embodied styles of Louis XV and Louis XVI.
Italian roots
While living in Portugal, Queen Maria Pia never lost contact with other members of the Savoy family. She travelled extensively, visited the city of Venice in 1888, 1900 and 1901, and after walking in the Salviati and Compagnia Venezia Murano house, she bought the major part of the collection that's now in National Palaces of Ajuda, Sintra and Queluz.
A myriad of styles and techniques
Under the Historicist Muranese Revival of the dominant eclectic taste, fantasy and exuberance dominated. To create such an effect polychromy was deployed, with the use of warm and cool colours...
...and natural tones mixed, such as the colour of amethyst and fumé (smoky gray hue).
Moreover, decorative techniques were used, such as the gilding (cold or fire-gilding: in the first case a gold leaf is applied to the surface, in the second gold powder is sprinkled into the batch), the enamelling, the filigree in its many variegations, the "aventurina", the "mezza-stampaura" and the "incalmo".
In the collection there are also glassworks ornamented with dragons, dolphins, flowers and leaves, pearls, winged horses, blackberry appliqués, masks and lions (the symbol of the city of Venice) can be found - a summary of the whole repertoire of beloved 19th century styles and icons.
High-end glass for all purposes
Among the Ajuda National Palace's decorative glass objects are several bowls and jugs, and tableware, a mirror and a chandelier.
One thing is certain, this is undoubtedly an exotic and unique collection, the only of its kind in Portugal!
Text & Coordination:
Maria João Botelho Muniz Burnay, Glass Curator, Palácio Nacional da Ajuda
Rosa Barovier Mentasti, Murano Glass Specialist
Digital Production:
Luis Ramos Pinto (Direção Geral do Património Cultural)