This article first appeared in The Glass
Cone, Summer 2003, Issue 64,
a periodic publication of the Glass Association and is reproduced
with their permission. |
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| How did your collection start? |
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| Very much by accident. Hilary and I started going to
antiques fairs in the early 1980's when she was interested in Shelley
porcelain. On one such occasion I wandered off and found a big mottled
pink vase, which the dealer said he thought was Monart, but he wasn't
sure because there was no label and nothing had been published about
this sort of glass. I bought it because I liked it and then, at the
next Stafford Bingley Hall Fair, I found myself standing next to an
elderly man who was talking to a stall-holder about a piece of glass
on her stand which she thought was Monart. The man she was talking
to wasn't sure about it because the pontil mark "wasn't right".
After he had moved on, I asked the dealer who he was. She said that
his name was Cyril Manley and that 'what he doesn't know about glass
isn't worth knowing'. She had sold glass to Cyril before, and so she
gave me his telephone number. |
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I
rang him, told him that I was interested in Monart Glass, and received
an invitation to go to his house to have a look at his collection.
When I got there I found not only that Cyril had a huge glass collection,
which included some very nice pieces of Monart that are illustrated
in his book 'Decorative Victorian Glass', but that Paul Ysart, its
maker, was a personal friend. Friends for nearly 50 years, both
were by then widowers who were almost housebound and lonely, and
they used to call each other on alternate Fridays to chat about
glass.
After a couple of very late night visits to Cyril’s home,
by which time I had started to learn more about both the Ysart family
and their glassware and paperweights, it was obvious to me that,
unless someone researched its history by interviewing Paul Ysart
and the other workmen at Moncrieffs in Perth where it had been made,
the history of this glass would be lost forever. So, that’s
what I did. |
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| How did you go about that? |
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| Well, I joined the Glass Association, and got a lot
of encouragement and help from Charles Hajdamach and Roger Dodsworth
at Broadfield House. Through the Association I got to meet other collectors
who were into research. But in truth my greatest break came from Cyril
Manley. He gave me an introduction to Paul Ysart, and during 1984
and 1985 I made several long journeys to Paul's home in Lyth near
Wick. |
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| I interviewed him at length about the whole of his
life, including his childhood in France when his father worked at
the Schneider factory, as well as his own working life at Moncrieffs
in Perth and later at Caithness Glass in Wick. Without these personal
reminiscences the facts about the French connection might have been
lost. I also went back to the North British Glassworks in Perth and
interviewed some of the people who had worked with Paul before he
left Moncrieffs to become the Master Glassblower and Training Officer
at Caithness in 1963. Betty Reid, who was the dispatch clerk at Moncrieffs
from 1944 until 1982, was very helpful, and when she died in 1993
she left me all the factory pattern books and other Monart archives
that she had been able to 'rescue' from a skip after Monart production
ceased. Again, without people like her, this important part of Scotland’s
manufacturing history would have been lost. |
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| How did you put your collection together? |
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| For the first few years I bought a lot of pieces at
antiques fairs and from antiques shops in Scotland, and then in 1985
I bought Cyril Manley's own collection just before he sold the rest
at auction in 1986. I then wrote a couple of articles about Monart,
one for the catalogue for the 'British Glass Between The Wars' Exhibition
at Broadfield House in 1987. |
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There
was such a big increase in prices that it almost forced me out of
the Monart market for a few years, particularly when Michael Parkington
fell in love with it and had dealers searching the length and breadth
of the country for every good piece that came onto the market. This
continued after the publication of the book 'Ysart Glass' (to which
Ian was a major contributor), but after Michael Parkington's death
I went to both his sales, at Christie’s, and selected some
of the best pieces from his collection which complemented my own.
I also bought selectively from Frank Andrews and later from Nigel
Benson, the only two dealers who have specialised in this kind of
glass.
Didn't you acquire some of your pieces
from Paul Ysart himself?
Yes. I was very fortunate to be able to buy some of his personal pieces
of Monart when he eventually moved from Lyth into a retirement home
in Wick. |
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| What will happen to the Monart archives? |
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| I shall give the factory pattern books and the lamp
catalogues to Perth Museum and Art Gallery in memory of Betty Reid,
but there will be one or two of my own bits of Ysart memorabilia in
the sale. |
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| Are you keeping any back? |
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| Only a few small and broken pieces which have no real
value; I shall keep these to illustrate a lecture that I give on Twentieth
Century Scottish Art Glass. |
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| Why are you giving up your collection now? |
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| For a combination of reasons: partly because I can't
find any new pieces that I desperately want to buy at a price that
I can afford, and partly because I've run out of space in which to
display it all. Acquiring and owning such a large collection has given
me a lot of pleasure, but I enjoy collecting, and when the collection
has become static, as mine has been for the past few years, some of
the fun has gone. So, very reluctantly, I've come to the conclusion
that I should sell what I've got and start collecting something else. |
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| How are you going to dispose of your collection?
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| It will be offered for sale by Christie's South Kensington
on September 24 2003 as a single owner Monart sale. I shall be helping
to compile the catalogue, so that I can attach a provenance to all
the important pieces, including those from Cyril Manley's collection
and the Parkington collection. |
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| Will you miss it? |
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| Very much so, but I've already started
to collect twentieth century factory art pottery, and that will take
my mind off it for a while. |
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| End of interview. |
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