Description: A Stunning Ward Bennett Crystal Vessel designed for Sasaki of Japan. A thick walled leaded crystal glass bowl circa 1975. This heavy black glass vessel is 24% Lead Crystal from the Sengai line. It has a flat cut-polished top with a row of repeating carved triangles, squares, and circles around the top edge. Etched Sasaki on the bottom as shown. Excellent vintage condition 9.5/10 base rim scruffsHard to find in this larger sized statement postmodernist bowl by Acclaimed USA Designer Ward Bennett. LARGE 8 3/4” Dia x 4 1/2” H Unpacked weighs 5.06 Pounds *Ward Bennett created a number of different designs for Sasaki, and until the last couple of years he has been an under-recognized American designer whose genius is just starting to become better known and whose work has become increasingly collectible. A simple and elegant design so iconic that it can be found in the permanent collection of MOMA & the Brooklyn Museum. ** CAREFULLY CUSTOM PACKED AND SHIPS WITHIN ONE DAY UPON RECEIPT OF PAYMENT Ward Bennett - DesignerAMERICAN, 1917-2003Ward Bennett created everything from interiors and furniture to textiles and flatware. The unsung New York City-born modernist designer drew on the work of Le Corbusier and Auguste Rodin, studied art with the likes of Abstract Expressionist painter Hans Hofmann and counted legendary American luxury house Tiffany & Co. among his clients. For decades, Bennett created and filled spaces that were elegant, minimalist and deeply appealed to everyone who laid eyes on them. Bennett left home and school at the young age of 13. He found work in Manhattan’s Garment District, and within a few years, Bennett traveled to Europe on behalf of a clothing manufacturer to gather ideas for modern garments. He lived abroad as a young man, and when he returned to New York, during the early 1940s, he assisted fashion entrepreneur Hattie Carnegie as a window dresser. Bennett would also go on to share a sculpture studio with artist Louise Nevelson. He ventured into the world of jewelry design, creating necklaces, bracelets and other pieces with Richard Pousette-Dart. The Whitney Museum of American Artexhibited his sculptures, and it wouldn’t be long before the Museum of Modern Art included Bennett’s personal adornments with accessories by the likes of Alexander Calder, Harry Bertoia and Anni Albers in its 1946 “Modern Handmade Jewelry” show. Bennett didn’t take the plunge into interior design work until he was 30 years old — his inaugural project was an apartment in Manhattan and his clients were family members. He had no formal training in architecture or decorating — and would ultimately design a mere handful of houses in his life — so for his inviting leather office chairs, marble-topped tables and sleek storage cabinets, Bennett relied only on what he learned in the fashion world. Soon, every time he redecorated his own home — an elaborate apartment comprising former maids’ quarters in New York City’s magnificent Dakota building — it earned splashy coverage in the newspapers. Bennett’s client list eventually included David Rockefeller and Chase Manhattan Bank, Tiffany & Co., Sasaki, Italian industrialist Gianni Agnelli, and others, and during the 1970s he became in-house designer for Brickel Associates, a role that would endure for more than two decades. His work is on permanent view at the Museum of Modern Art and the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum in New York.
Price: 288.98 USD
Location: Ivins, Utah
End Time: 2025-01-16T13:56:13.000Z
Shipping Cost: 25.95 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Origin: Japan
Pattern: Vintage
Shape: Round
Occasion: All Occasions
Color: Black
Material: Crystal, Glass
Year Manufactured: 1975
Set Includes: Bowl
Vintage: Yes
Brand: Sasaki
Type: Bowl
Style: POSTMODERNISM
Theme: Post Modern Style Designer
Production Style: Art Glass
Time Period Manufactured: 1970-1979
Country/Region of Manufacture: Japan
Handmade: Yes